This is a quirk of Debian.

Systemd represents a pretty fundamental shift to Linux distributions.
Conservative distributions like Debian have taken a wait and see
approach before adopting it. As a result the version of systemd in
Debian stable, Sid, is pretty old.

One option would be look at using the current development version of
Debian, Jessie, which will become the next stable release later this
year or early next year.

As with everything it is and engineering trade off; old and stable vs.
new and awesome :)


David

On Thu, May 29, 2014 at 1:00 AM,  <michael.du...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wednesday, May 28, 2014 2:37:13 PM UTC-7, RobertCNelson wrote:
>>
>> It's there just an older version of systemd where it was prefixed.
>> systemd-
>
> Follow-on question: any risk in moving to the latest version of systemd?
> The version on the flasher is 44, the version on freedesktop.org is 213 and
> two years newer...
>
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