Also, have a look at the "System Commands" section of th man-page to systemctl,
https://man.archlinux.org/man/systemctl.1.en

Am 03.08.23 um 12:29 schrieb Uwe Sauter:
> Reading the related man-page [1] I suppose that it is up to the user 
> initiating the reboot whether
> the system is soft or cold rebooted.
> 
> Quoting:
> 
> 'Note that systemd-soft-reboot.service (and related units) should never be 
> executed directly.
> Instead, trigger system shutdown with a command such as "systemctl 
> soft-reboot".'
> 
> [1] https://man.archlinux.org/man/systemd-soft-reboot.service.8.en
> 
> Am 03.08.23 um 12:24 schrieb David C. Rankin:
>> Arch devs,
>>
>>   I read that systemd 254 will enable a soft-reboot similar to how windows 
>> does fast-boot does it.
>> (The Register: https://go.reg.cx/tdml/dfd67/64f3cc7f/8aaa3ef6/49jh)
>>
>>   Mentioned in the article is this soft-reboot will prevent a full reboot - 
>> preventing kernel
>> updates in that mode. But the article is silent, and indeed hints at the 
>> open question of if or how
>> this will be disabled to allow kernel updates, dual-booting, etc..
>>
>>   Personally, just like on windows, I want to permanently disable it. I 
>> don't know if that has been
>> settled yet on Arch, but wanted to know whether we will have the ability to 
>> just disable the systemd
>> soft-boot. I have a 12 second cold-start to full desktop -- I have no need 
>> for a soft-reboot that
>> will cause issues with dual-booting and kernel updates.
>>
>>   Anybody know if, and how we will be able to do it?
>>
>>
>>
> 

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