systemd 261 Released With New systemd-sysinstall OS Installer, IMDSD & Storagectl
systemd 261 Released With New systemd-sysinstall OS Installer, IMDSD & Storagectl
https://www.phoronix.com/news/systemd-261
Publish Date: 2026-06-19 14:28:00
Source Domain: www.phoronix.com
Systemd 261 is out as stable today with a number of new features and ready to coincide with H2’2026 Linux distributions.
The systemd 261 release is out today with a host of new features and capabilities for this Linux init system and service manager and a lot more. As covered previously on Phoronix, some of the interesting additions with systemd 261 include:
– A new subsystem with systemd 261 is the Instance Metadata Service “IMDS”. This includes the new systemd-imdsd that makes IMDS services accessible to local programs. There is also a hardware database for recognizing established public clouds via SMBIOS information such as for Amazon EC2, Microsoft Azure, Google COmpute Engine, Oracle Cloud, Tencent Cloud, Hetzner, and others. This makes for a nice unified way of accessing virtual machine metadata from systemd.
– Systemd 261 is also introducing storagectl as a new command-line tool and Varlink interface for exposing storage resources in a unified manner for use as managed user storage.
– There is also now systemd-sysinstall that provides a simple, modern textual installer for an OS. This wraps around systemd’s partitioning capabilities, credential management, and other system management functionality while copying the OS from a temporary boot medium like a USB drive.
– A new service systemd-tpm2-swtpm.service for running the IBM Software TPM “swtpm” for an automatic fallback on systems that lack a pysical TPM but where TPM functionality should be made available.
– A new tmpfiles.d/root.conf for ensuring that root directory permissions get set to 0555.
– PID1 now supports the Linux kernel’s Live Update Orchestrator “LUO” and Kernel Handover “KHO” capabilities.
– User session managers now support persisting user units’ FD Stores
– A new unit setting of CPUSetPartition= allows for configuring the CPU set cgroup partition type such as root, isolated, or member for systemd services.
– There is a new setting of RestrictFileSystemAccess= that leverages a BPF…