Hello everyone! I know that Linux GUI advanced in last few years but we still lack some good system configuration tools for advanced users or sysadmins. What utilities you miss on Linux? And is there any normal third party alternatives?

  • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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    13 days ago

    Its far too convoluted. A systemd gui for… DNS? Boot services? User Services? tmp file management? Everything?

    • oldfart@lemm.ee
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      13 days ago

      Everything! And a virt-manager like tool for nspawn! And for the faux-cron jobs! Make it as byzantine as systemd itself

    • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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      13 days ago

      That’s the point. That systemd is convoluted, so a gui could help. And yes, for everything. :)

      • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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        13 days ago

        My point is there is no way to sanely create a GUI for something has it’s tendrils in… Everything. In fact, there’s no sane way to do any sort of UI for such a beast.

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        13 days ago

        Maybe the system should be made less convoluted.

        I mean, do we really need a half dozen network management services, all broken in their own way and none that do everything you need?

    • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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      13 days ago

      All of those are entirely separate components; I have no idea what you’re attempting to imply here.

      • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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        13 days ago

        Those are all things systemd manages… as well as logs, udev, etc etc.

        What kind of gui too could you even imagine would sanely present all of that?

        • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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          13 days ago

          As mentioned, those are entirely separate and even independent components.

          Systemd (as in: pid1) only “manages” them insofar as that it controls their running processes just like any other service on your system.

          systemd-boot doesn’t interact with systemd at all; it’s not even a Linux program.

          The reason these components have “systemd” in their name is that these components are maintained by the same people as part of the greater systemd project. They have no further relation to systemd pid1 (the service manager).

          Whoever told you otherwise milead you and likely had an agenda or was transitively mislead by someone who does. Please don’t spread disinformation further.

          • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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            13 days ago

            Without going into the weeds and all, given they all are in the same project, regardless…

            You said “a gui for managing systemd”, so which part? Boot, udev, and journal? All three are required and not optional for systemd the OS infrastructure layer suite (or whatever it’s called these days), so minimally, assume that?

            If so, what kind of sane gui could manage those three very disparate things?

            • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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              13 days ago

              If you talk about “a GUI for systemd”, you obviously mean its most central and defining component which is the service manager. I’m going to assume you’re arguing in bad faith from here on out because I consider that to be glaringly obvious.

              systemd-boot still has no connection to systemd the service manager. It doesn’t even run at the same time. Anything concerning it is part of the static system configuration, not runtime state.
              udevd doesn’t interact with it in any significant user-relevant way either and it too is mostly static system configuration state.

              journald would be an obvious thing that you would want integrated into a systemd GUI but even that could theoretically be optional. Though it’d still be useful without, it would diminish the usefulness of the systemd GUI significantly IMHO.
              It’s also not disparate at all as it provides information on the same set of services that systemd manages and i.e. systemctl has journald integration too. You use the exact same identifiers.