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<p style="margin: 0 0 1em 0; color: black;">The fastest any distro is going to get systemd would probably be from a bleeding-edge distro (e.g. Fedora Rawhide). If you don't want you system to be a disaster zone, though, Arch got systemd 237 just two weeks after release. </p>
<p style="margin: 0 0 1em 0; color: black;">Fedora will push systemd releases with their new versions, which come out every six months, and I believe non-LTS Ubuntu distros are probably the same. </p>
<p style="margin: 0 0 1em 0; color: black;">Anything LTS though (like Ubuntu LTS, Debian, or your own CentOS) is going to be the absolute *worst* for getting pretty much anything new...<br>
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<p style="color: black; font-size: 10pt; font-family: sans-serif; margin: 8pt 0;">On July 18, 2018 5:27:09 PM Juanjo Presa <juanjop@gmail.com> wrote:</p>
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<div dir="ltr">I wonder which ways are to run last systemd versions? nowadays Im running Centos 7 with systemd facebook backports (<a href="https://github.com/facebookincubator/rpm-backports" target="_blank">https://github.com/facebookincubator/rpm-backports</a>). But maybe you guys have another way, NixOs? Archlinux?<div><br></div><div>Tyvm.</div></div>
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