I mean "systemctl status" shows all services and their hierarchy, there's also "systemctl list-unit-files" if you want to see things that aren't part of the current target (runlevel).
It's much easier in the systemd world to see the state of the system, the state of the service, and the logs of a service because it enforces this consistency.
It's much easier in the systemd world to see the state of the system, the state of the service, and the logs of a service because it enforces this consistency.