KaOS Linux 2026.02 was released today as the February 2026 ISO snapshot for this independent GNU/Linux distribution, which uses Arch Linux’s pacman package manager, and the first release to ship with the Niri Wayland compositor.

After using the KDE/Plasma desktop environment by default for more than 12 years since its initial release under the name of KdeOS, the KaOS Linux distribution will no longer ship with its unique Plasma desktop setup, as the devs do not want to use the systemd init system anymore in the distro.

Instead, they put a Niri/Noctalia setup into the KaOS Linux 2026.02 release, while retaining the distribution’s unique look and still offering users access to popular KDE applications that were shipped with the Plasma desktop. However, this release still ships with systemd as the default init system.

  • infeeeee@lemmy.zip
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    9
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    9 hours ago

    Systemd is somewhat modular, as you don’t have to use every feature of it. They will be still sitting on your drive, but not consuming any cpu cycles. Like the kernel. It’s not a problem it contains code for hardware you don’t have, but somehow it’s a problem for systemd

    It’s not true everything is running as pid 1. on my pc these are running under different pids, you can check it yourself, you should see something similar: ps aux | grep systemd

    systemd-journald
    systemd-timesyncd
    systemd-udevd
    systemd-logind
    systemd-machined
    

    I agree it’s a problem it’s becoming a hard dependency for a lot of semi related projects though, it would be healthier for the whole ecosystem if systemd would be replaceable.

    • N.E.P.T.R@lemmy.blahaj.zone
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      5 hours ago

      Are these “other features” hard dependent on systemd? If yes, how are they modular (or portable)? “My program can be used on any system with a couple of small dependencies: Linux kernel, glibc, and the systemd Kernel” /j

      There are some attempts to use systemd tools independent for it, like elogind and eudev, but see what I mean. Hard forks (with major rewrites) are required because these tools heavily depend on systemd, which fine I understand having dependency, but you cant just use part of systemd since it is to tangled together. It would be nice if mire of systemd code was available as separate libraries so you could further reduce attack surface by building a significantly slimmed version of systemd+feature. I am unsure if you meant modular as in “you can choose to enable them” or as in “you can build without them” or both.

      Also, I never claimed systemd ran everything under pid1, just plenty more then the should be, like init plus service manager (and more), not every single systemd tool because that would be beyond stupid and systemd isnt made by idiots.