Artix Linux Drops GNOME Desktop Support Over Systemd Dependence

Artix Linux maintainers announce the end of GNOME desktop support, citing systemd dependence as the key breaking point.

The Artix Linux team has announced it is officially ending support for GNOME-based desktop environments, citing upstream changes that make it impossible to run them without systemd.

For those unfamiliar, Artix is a systemd-free, Arch-based distribution that offers users the rolling-release model and extensive software availability of Arch Linux, but with alternative init systems, including OpenRC, runit, dinit, and s6.

The distribution offers KDE Plasma, Cinnamon, Xfce, MATE, LXDE, and LXQt versions, plus a minimal base without a desktop.

Artix Linux with Plasma desktop.
Artix Linux with Plasma desktop.

The decision follows the release of GNOME 49, where the fallback code in gnome-session that previously allowed non-systemd setups via elogind has been removed. With no alternative code path available, GNOME now requires systemd as a hard dependency.

“Since we don’t have the time or interest to write a new non-systemd codepath for gnome-session, this means that all support for GNOME-based desktops has to be dropped.”

As a result, gnome-session, gnome-shell, mutter, and gnome-settings-daemon will no longer be maintained in the Artix repositories. While older versions of these packages remain for now, maintainers warn they may not function correctly and will eventually be removed.

Standalone GNOME applications, however, are not affected and will continue to be packaged for users.

For more information, see the announcement in Artix’s forums.

Bobby Borisov

Bobby Borisov

Bobby, an editor-in-chief at Linuxiac, is a Linux professional with over 20 years of experience. With a strong focus on Linux and open-source software, he has worked as a Senior Linux System Administrator, Software Developer, and DevOps Engineer for small and large multinational companies.

One comment

  1. Voltaflake

    Wise decision. Red Hat is trying to force their stuff down everyone’s throat, as usual. They spend a lot of money trying to discredit or extinguish the competition via bots and paid trolls for everything they NIHed at some point, thereby acting against the open source community.

    Dropping Gnome isn’t a big loss for anyone either. It has been massively losing momentum of late anyways.
    It’s on its way to become a second-tier Linux DE at this point, except maybe for some gullible cultists who drank the kool-aid.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *