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1 <?xml version='1.0'?>
2 <!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % entities SYSTEM "custom-entities.ent" >
5 %entities;
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7 <!-- SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later -->
8
9 <refentry id="systemd.unit"
10 xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
11
12 <refentryinfo>
13 <title>systemd.unit</title>
14 <productname>systemd</productname>
15 </refentryinfo>
16
17 <refmeta>
18 <refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle>
19 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
20 </refmeta>
21
22 <refnamediv>
23 <refname>systemd.unit</refname>
24 <refpurpose>Unit configuration</refpurpose>
25 </refnamediv>
26
27 <refsynopsisdiv>
28 <para><filename><replaceable>service</replaceable>.service</filename>,
29 <filename><replaceable>socket</replaceable>.socket</filename>,
30 <filename><replaceable>device</replaceable>.device</filename>,
31 <filename><replaceable>mount</replaceable>.mount</filename>,
32 <filename><replaceable>automount</replaceable>.automount</filename>,
33 <filename><replaceable>swap</replaceable>.swap</filename>,
34 <filename><replaceable>target</replaceable>.target</filename>,
35 <filename><replaceable>path</replaceable>.path</filename>,
36 <filename><replaceable>timer</replaceable>.timer</filename>,
37 <filename><replaceable>slice</replaceable>.slice</filename>,
38 <filename><replaceable>scope</replaceable>.scope</filename></para>
39
40 <refsect2>
41 <title>System Unit Search Path</title>
42
43 <para><literallayout><filename>/etc/systemd/system.control/*</filename>
44 <filename>/run/systemd/system.control/*</filename>
45 <filename>/run/systemd/transient/*</filename>
46 <filename>/run/systemd/generator.early/*</filename>
47 <filename>/etc/systemd/system/*</filename>
48 <filename>/etc/systemd/system.attached/*</filename>
49 <filename>/run/systemd/system/*</filename>
50 <filename>/run/systemd/system.attached/*</filename>
51 <filename>/run/systemd/generator/*</filename>
52 <filename index='false'></filename>
53 <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/system/*</filename>
54 <filename>/run/systemd/generator.late/*</filename></literallayout></para>
55 </refsect2>
56
57 <refsect2>
58 <title>User Unit Search Path</title>
59 <para><literallayout><filename>~/.config/systemd/user.control/*</filename>
60 <filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/user.control/*</filename>
61 <filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/transient/*</filename>
62 <filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/generator.early/*</filename>
63 <filename>~/.config/systemd/user/*</filename>
64 <filename>$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/systemd/user/*</filename>
65 <filename>/etc/systemd/user/*</filename>
66 <filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/user/*</filename>
67 <filename>/run/systemd/user/*</filename>
68 <filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/generator/*</filename>
69 <filename>$XDG_DATA_HOME/systemd/user/*</filename>
70 <filename>$XDG_DATA_DIRS/systemd/user/*</filename>
71 <filename index='false'></filename>
72 <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/user/*</filename>
73 <filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/generator.late/*</filename></literallayout></para>
74 </refsect2>
75
76 </refsynopsisdiv>
77
78 <refsect1>
79 <title>Description</title>
80
81 <para>A unit file is a plain text ini-style file that encodes information about a service, a
82 socket, a device, a mount point, an automount point, a swap file or partition, a start-up
83 target, a watched file system path, a timer controlled and supervised by
84 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>, a
85 resource management slice or a group of externally created processes. See
86 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.syntax</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
87 for a general description of the syntax.</para>
88
89 <para>This man page lists the common configuration options of all
90 the unit types. These options need to be configured in the [Unit]
91 or [Install] sections of the unit files.</para>
92
93 <para>In addition to the generic [Unit] and [Install] sections
94 described here, each unit may have a type-specific section, e.g.
95 [Service] for a service unit. See the respective man pages for
96 more information:
97 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
98 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
99 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.device</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
100 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
101 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.automount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
102 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.swap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
103 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.target</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
104 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.path</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
105 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.timer</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
106 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.slice</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
107 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.scope</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
108 </para>
109
110 <para>Unit files are loaded from a set of paths determined during compilation, described in the next
111 section.</para>
112
113 <para>Valid unit names consist of a "name prefix" and a dot and a suffix specifying the unit type. The
114 "unit prefix" must consist of one or more valid characters (ASCII letters, digits, <literal>:</literal>,
115 <literal>-</literal>, <literal>_</literal>, <literal>.</literal>, and <literal>\</literal>). The total
116 length of the unit name including the suffix must not exceed 256 characters. The type suffix must be one
117 of <literal>.service</literal>, <literal>.socket</literal>, <literal>.device</literal>,
118 <literal>.mount</literal>, <literal>.automount</literal>, <literal>.swap</literal>,
119 <literal>.target</literal>, <literal>.path</literal>, <literal>.timer</literal>,
120 <literal>.slice</literal>, or <literal>.scope</literal>.</para>
121
122 <para>Units names can be parameterized by a single argument called the "instance name". The unit is then
123 constructed based on a "template file" which serves as the definition of multiple services or other
124 units. A template unit must have a single <literal>@</literal> at the end of the name (right before the
125 type suffix). The name of the full unit is formed by inserting the instance name between
126 <literal>@</literal> and the unit type suffix. In the unit file itself, the instance parameter may be
127 referred to using <literal>%i</literal> and other specifiers, see below.</para>
128
129 <para>Unit files may contain additional options on top of those
130 listed here. If systemd encounters an unknown option, it will
131 write a warning log message but continue loading the unit. If an
132 option or section name is prefixed with <option>X-</option>, it is
133 ignored completely by systemd. Options within an ignored section
134 do not need the prefix. Applications may use this to include
135 additional information in the unit files.</para>
136
137 <para>Units can be aliased (have an alternative name), by creating a symlink from the new name to the
138 existing name in one of the unit search paths. For example, <filename>systemd-networkd.service</filename>
139 has the alias <filename>dbus-org.freedesktop.network1.service</filename>, created during installation as
140 a symlink, so when <command>systemd</command> is asked through D-Bus to load
141 <filename>dbus-org.freedesktop.network1.service</filename>, it'll load
142 <filename>systemd-networkd.service</filename>. As another example, <filename>default.target</filename>
143 the default system target started at boot — is commonly symlinked (aliased) to either
144 <filename>multi-user.target</filename> or <filename>graphical.target</filename> to select what is started
145 by default. Alias names may be used in commands like <command>disable</command>,
146 <command>start</command>, <command>stop</command>, <command>status</command>, and similar, and in all
147 unit dependency directives, including <varname>Wants=</varname>, <varname>Requires=</varname>,
148 <varname>Before=</varname>, <varname>After=</varname>. Aliases cannot be used with the
149 <command>preset</command> command.</para>
150
151 <para>Aliases obey the following restrictions: a unit of a certain type (<literal>.service</literal>,
152 <literal>.socket</literal>, …) can only be aliased by a name with the same type suffix. A plain unit (not
153 a template or an instance), may only be aliased by a plain name. A template instance may only be aliased
154 by another template instance, and the instance part must be identical. A template may be aliased by
155 another template (in which case the alias applies to all instances of the template). As a special case, a
156 template instance (e.g. <literal>alias@inst.service</literal>) may be a symlink to different template
157 (e.g. <literal>template@inst.service</literal>). In that case, just this specific instance is aliased,
158 while other instances of the template (e.g. <literal>alias@foo.service</literal>,
159 <literal>alias@bar.service</literal>) are not aliased. Those rule preserve the requirement that the
160 instance (if any) is always uniquely defined for a given unit and all its aliases.</para>
161
162 <para>Unit files may specify aliases through the <varname>Alias=</varname> directive in the [Install]
163 section. When the unit is enabled, symlinks will be created for those names, and removed when the unit is
164 disabled. For example, <filename>reboot.target</filename> specifies
165 <varname>Alias=ctrl-alt-del.target</varname>, so when enabled, the symlink
166 <filename>/etc/systemd/system/ctrl-alt-del.service</filename> pointing to the
167 <filename>reboot.target</filename> file will be created, and when
168 <keycombo><keycap>Ctrl</keycap><keycap>Alt</keycap><keycap>Del</keycap></keycombo> is invoked,
169 <command>systemd</command> will look for the <filename>ctrl-alt-del.service</filename> and execute
170 <filename>reboot.service</filename>. <command>systemd</command> does not look at the [Install] section at
171 all during normal operation, so any directives in that section only have an effect through the symlinks
172 created during enablement.</para>
173
174 <para>Along with a unit file <filename>foo.service</filename>, the directory
175 <filename>foo.service.wants/</filename> may exist. All unit files symlinked from such a directory are
176 implicitly added as dependencies of type <varname>Wants=</varname> to the unit. Similar functionality
177 exists for <varname>Requires=</varname> type dependencies as well, the directory suffix is
178 <filename>.requires/</filename> in this case. This functionality is useful to hook units into the
179 start-up of other units, without having to modify their unit files. For details about the semantics of
180 <varname>Wants=</varname>, see below. The preferred way to create symlinks in the
181 <filename>.wants/</filename> or <filename>.requires/</filename> directory of a unit file is by embedding
182 the dependency in [Install] section of the target unit, and creating the symlink in the file system with
183 the <command>enable</command> or <command>preset</command> commands of
184 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
185
186 <para>Along with a unit file <filename>foo.service</filename>, a "drop-in" directory
187 <filename>foo.service.d/</filename> may exist. All files with the suffix
188 <literal>.conf</literal> from this directory will be merged in the alphanumeric order and parsed
189 after the main unit file itself has been parsed. This is useful to alter or add configuration
190 settings for a unit, without having to modify unit files. Each drop-in file must contain appropriate
191 section headers. For instantiated units, this logic will first look for the instance
192 <literal>.d/</literal> subdirectory (e.g. <literal>foo@bar.service.d/</literal>) and read its
193 <literal>.conf</literal> files, followed by the template <literal>.d/</literal> subdirectory (e.g.
194 <literal>foo@.service.d/</literal>) and the <literal>.conf</literal> files there. Moreover for unit
195 names containing dashes (<literal>-</literal>), the set of directories generated by repeatedly
196 truncating the unit name after all dashes is searched too. Specifically, for a unit name
197 <filename>foo-bar-baz.service</filename> not only the regular drop-in directory
198 <filename>foo-bar-baz.service.d/</filename> is searched but also both <filename>foo-bar-.service.d/</filename> and
199 <filename>foo-.service.d/</filename>. This is useful for defining common drop-ins for a set of related units, whose
200 names begin with a common prefix. This scheme is particularly useful for mount, automount and slice units, whose
201 systematic naming structure is built around dashes as component separators. Note that equally named drop-in files
202 further down the prefix hierarchy override those further up,
203 i.e. <filename>foo-bar-.service.d/10-override.conf</filename> overrides
204 <filename>foo-.service.d/10-override.conf</filename>.</para>
205
206 <para>In cases of unit aliases (described above), dropins for the aliased name and all aliases are
207 loaded. In the example of <filename>default.target</filename> aliasing
208 <filename>graphical.target</filename>, <filename>default.target.d/</filename>,
209 <filename>default.target.wants/</filename>, <filename>default.target.requires/</filename>,
210 <filename>graphical.target.d/</filename>, <filename>graphical.target.wants/</filename>,
211 <filename>graphical.target.requires/</filename> would all be read. For templates, dropins for the
212 template, any template aliases, the template instance, and all alias instances are read. When just a
213 specific template instance is aliased, then the dropins for the target template, the target template
214 instance, and the alias template instance are read.</para>
215
216 <para>In addition to <filename>/etc/systemd/system</filename>, the drop-in <literal>.d/</literal>
217 directories for system services can be placed in <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/system</filename> or
218 <filename>/run/systemd/system</filename> directories. Drop-in files in <filename>/etc/</filename>
219 take precedence over those in <filename>/run/</filename> which in turn take precedence over those
220 in <filename>/usr/lib/</filename>. Drop-in files under any of these directories take precedence
221 over unit files wherever located. Multiple drop-in files with different names are applied in
222 lexicographic order, regardless of which of the directories they reside in.</para>
223
224 <para>Units also support a top-level drop-in with <filename><replaceable>type</replaceable>.d/</filename>,
225 where <replaceable>type</replaceable> may be e.g. <literal>service</literal> or <literal>socket</literal>,
226 that allows altering or adding to the settings of all corresponding unit files on the system.
227 The formatting and precedence of applying drop-in configurations follow what is defined above.
228 Files in <filename><replaceable>type</replaceable>.d/</filename> have lower precedence compared
229 to files in name-specific override directories. The usual rules apply: multiple drop-in files
230 with different names are applied in lexicographic order, regardless of which of the directories
231 they reside in, so a file in <filename><replaceable>type</replaceable>.d/</filename> applies
232 to a unit only if there are no drop-ins or masks with that name in directories with higher
233 precedence. See Examples.</para>
234
235 <para>Note that while systemd offers a flexible dependency system
236 between units it is recommended to use this functionality only
237 sparingly and instead rely on techniques such as bus-based or
238 socket-based activation which make dependencies implicit,
239 resulting in a both simpler and more flexible system.</para>
240
241 <para>As mentioned above, a unit may be instantiated from a template file. This allows creation
242 of multiple units from a single configuration file. If systemd looks for a unit configuration
243 file, it will first search for the literal unit name in the file system. If that yields no
244 success and the unit name contains an <literal>@</literal> character, systemd will look for a
245 unit template that shares the same name but with the instance string (i.e. the part between the
246 <literal>@</literal> character and the suffix) removed. Example: if a service
247 <filename>getty@tty3.service</filename> is requested and no file by that name is found, systemd
248 will look for <filename>getty@.service</filename> and instantiate a service from that
249 configuration file if it is found.</para>
250
251 <para>To refer to the instance string from within the
252 configuration file you may use the special <literal>%i</literal>
253 specifier in many of the configuration options. See below for
254 details.</para>
255
256 <para>If a unit file is empty (i.e. has the file size 0) or is
257 symlinked to <filename>/dev/null</filename>, its configuration
258 will not be loaded and it appears with a load state of
259 <literal>masked</literal>, and cannot be activated. Use this as an
260 effective way to fully disable a unit, making it impossible to
261 start it even manually.</para>
262
263 <para>The unit file format is covered by the
264 <ulink url="https://systemd.io/PORTABILITY_AND_STABILITY/">Interface
265 Portability and Stability Promise</ulink>.</para>
266
267 </refsect1>
268
269 <refsect1>
270 <title>String Escaping for Inclusion in Unit Names</title>
271
272 <para>Sometimes it is useful to convert arbitrary strings into unit names. To facilitate this, a method of string
273 escaping is used, in order to map strings containing arbitrary byte values (except <constant>NUL</constant>) into
274 valid unit names and their restricted character set. A common special case are unit names that reflect paths to
275 objects in the file system hierarchy. Example: a device unit <filename>dev-sda.device</filename> refers to a device
276 with the device node <filename index="false">/dev/sda</filename> in the file system.</para>
277
278 <para>The escaping algorithm operates as follows: given a string, any <literal>/</literal> character is
279 replaced by <literal>-</literal>, and all other characters which are not ASCII alphanumerics,
280 <literal>:</literal>, <literal>_</literal> or <literal>.</literal> are replaced by C-style
281 <literal>\x2d</literal> escapes. In addition, <literal>.</literal> is replaced with such a C-style escape
282 when it would appear as the first character in the escaped string.</para>
283
284 <para>When the input qualifies as absolute file system path, this algorithm is extended slightly: the path to the
285 root directory <literal>/</literal> is encoded as single dash <literal>-</literal>. In addition, any leading,
286 trailing or duplicate <literal>/</literal> characters are removed from the string before transformation. Example:
287 <filename index="false">/foo//bar/baz/</filename> becomes <literal>foo-bar-baz</literal>.</para>
288
289 <para>This escaping is fully reversible, as long as it is known whether the escaped string was a path (the
290 unescaping results are different for paths and non-path strings). The
291 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-escape</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> command may be
292 used to apply and reverse escaping on arbitrary strings. Use <command>systemd-escape --path</command> to escape
293 path strings, and <command>systemd-escape</command> without <option>--path</option> otherwise.</para>
294 </refsect1>
295
296 <refsect1>
297 <title>Automatic dependencies</title>
298
299 <refsect2>
300 <title>Implicit Dependencies</title>
301
302 <para>A number of unit dependencies are implicitly established, depending on unit type and
303 unit configuration. These implicit dependencies can make unit configuration file cleaner. For
304 the implicit dependencies in each unit type, please refer to section "Implicit Dependencies"
305 in respective man pages.</para>
306
307 <para>For example, service units with <varname>Type=dbus</varname> automatically acquire
308 dependencies of type <varname>Requires=</varname> and <varname>After=</varname> on
309 <filename>dbus.socket</filename>. See
310 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
311 for details.</para>
312 </refsect2>
313
314 <refsect2>
315 <title>Default Dependencies</title>
316
317 <para>Default dependencies are similar to implicit dependencies, but can be turned on and off
318 by setting <varname>DefaultDependencies=</varname> to <varname>yes</varname> (the default) and
319 <varname>no</varname>, while implicit dependencies are always in effect. See section "Default
320 Dependencies" in respective man pages for the effect of enabling
321 <varname>DefaultDependencies=</varname> in each unit types.</para>
322
323 <para>For example, target units will complement all configured dependencies of type
324 <varname>Wants=</varname> or <varname>Requires=</varname> with dependencies of type
325 <varname>After=</varname> unless <varname>DefaultDependencies=no</varname> is set in the
326 specified units. See
327 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.target</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
328 for details. Note that this behavior can be turned off by setting
329 <varname>DefaultDependencies=no</varname>.</para>
330 </refsect2>
331 </refsect1>
332
333 <refsect1>
334 <title>Unit File Load Path</title>
335
336 <para>Unit files are loaded from a set of paths determined during
337 compilation, described in the two tables below. Unit files found
338 in directories listed earlier override files with the same name in
339 directories lower in the list.</para>
340
341 <para>When the variable <varname>$SYSTEMD_UNIT_PATH</varname> is set,
342 the contents of this variable overrides the unit load path. If
343 <varname>$SYSTEMD_UNIT_PATH</varname> ends with an empty component
344 (<literal>:</literal>), the usual unit load path will be appended
345 to the contents of the variable.</para>
346
347 <table>
348 <title>
349 Load path when running in system mode (<option>--system</option>).
350 </title>
351
352 <tgroup cols='2'>
353 <colspec colname='path' />
354 <colspec colname='expl' />
355 <thead>
356 <row>
357 <entry>Path</entry>
358 <entry>Description</entry>
359 </row>
360 </thead>
361 <tbody>
362 <row>
363 <entry><filename>/etc/systemd/system.control</filename></entry>
364 <entry morerows="1">Persistent and transient configuration created using the dbus API</entry>
365 </row>
366 <row>
367 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/system.control</filename></entry>
368 </row>
369 <row>
370 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/transient</filename></entry>
371 <entry>Dynamic configuration for transient units</entry>
372 </row>
373 <row>
374 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/generator.early</filename></entry>
375 <entry>Generated units with high priority (see <replaceable>early-dir</replaceable> in <citerefentry
376 ><refentrytitle>systemd.generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
377 </row>
378 <row>
379 <entry><filename>/etc/systemd/system</filename></entry>
380 <entry>System units created by the administrator</entry>
381 </row>
382 <row>
383 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/system</filename></entry>
384 <entry>Runtime units</entry>
385 </row>
386 <row>
387 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/generator</filename></entry>
388 <entry>Generated units with medium priority (see <replaceable>normal-dir</replaceable> in <citerefentry
389 ><refentrytitle>systemd.generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
390 </row>
391 <row>
392 <entry><filename>/usr/local/lib/systemd/system</filename></entry>
393 <entry>System units installed by the administrator </entry>
394 </row>
395 <row>
396 <entry><filename>/usr/lib/systemd/system</filename></entry>
397 <entry>System units installed by the distribution package manager</entry>
398 </row>
399 <row>
400 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/generator.late</filename></entry>
401 <entry>Generated units with low priority (see <replaceable>late-dir</replaceable> in <citerefentry
402 ><refentrytitle>systemd.generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
403 </row>
404 </tbody>
405 </tgroup>
406 </table>
407
408 <table>
409 <title>
410 Load path when running in user mode (<option>--user</option>).
411 </title>
412
413 <tgroup cols='2'>
414 <colspec colname='path' />
415 <colspec colname='expl' />
416 <thead>
417 <row>
418 <entry>Path</entry>
419 <entry>Description</entry>
420 </row>
421 </thead>
422 <tbody>
423 <row>
424 <entry><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/systemd/user.control</filename> or <filename
425 >~/.config/systemd/user.control</filename></entry>
426 <entry morerows="1">Persistent and transient configuration created using the dbus API (<varname>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</varname> is used if set, <filename>~/.config</filename> otherwise)</entry>
427 </row>
428 <row>
429 <entry><filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/user.control</filename></entry>
430 </row>
431 <row>
432 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/transient</filename></entry>
433 <entry>Dynamic configuration for transient units</entry>
434 </row>
435 <row>
436 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/generator.early</filename></entry>
437 <entry>Generated units with high priority (see <replaceable>early-dir</replaceable> in <citerefentry
438 ><refentrytitle>systemd.generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
439 </row>
440 <row>
441 <entry><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/systemd/user</filename> or <filename>$HOME/.config/systemd/user</filename></entry>
442 <entry>User configuration (<varname>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</varname> is used if set, <filename>~/.config</filename> otherwise)</entry>
443 </row>
444 <row>
445 <entry><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/systemd/user</filename> or <filename>/etc/xdg/systemd/user</filename></entry>
446 <entry>Additional configuration directories as specified by the XDG base directory specification (<varname>$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS</varname> is used if set, <filename>/etc/xdg</filename> otherwise)</entry>
447 </row>
448 <row>
449 <entry><filename>/etc/systemd/user</filename></entry>
450 <entry>User units created by the administrator</entry>
451 </row>
452 <row>
453 <entry><filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/user</filename></entry>
454 <entry>Runtime units (only used when $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is set)</entry>
455 </row>
456 <row>
457 <entry><filename>/run/systemd/user</filename></entry>
458 <entry>Runtime units</entry>
459 </row>
460 <row>
461 <entry><filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/generator</filename></entry>
462 <entry>Generated units with medium priority (see <replaceable>normal-dir</replaceable> in <citerefentry
463 ><refentrytitle>systemd.generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
464 </row>
465 <row>
466 <entry><filename>$XDG_DATA_HOME/systemd/user</filename> or <filename>$HOME/.local/share/systemd/user</filename></entry>
467 <entry>Units of packages that have been installed in the home directory (<varname>$XDG_DATA_HOME</varname> is used if set, <filename>~/.local/share</filename> otherwise)</entry>
468 </row>
469 <row>
470 <entry><filename>$XDG_DATA_DIRS/systemd/user</filename> or <filename>/usr/local/share/systemd/user</filename> and <filename>/usr/share/systemd/user</filename></entry>
471 <entry>Additional data directories as specified by the XDG base directory specification (<varname>$XDG_DATA_DIRS</varname> is used if set, <filename>/usr/local/share</filename> and <filename>/usr/share</filename> otherwise)</entry>
472 </row>
473 <row>
474 <entry><filename>$dir/systemd/user</filename> for each <varname index="false">$dir</varname> in <varname>$XDG_DATA_DIRS</varname></entry>
475 <entry>Additional locations for installed user units, one for each entry in <varname>$XDG_DATA_DIRS</varname></entry>
476 </row>
477 <row>
478 <entry><filename>/usr/local/lib/systemd/user</filename></entry>
479 <entry>User units installed by the administrator</entry>
480 </row>
481 <row>
482 <entry><filename>/usr/lib/systemd/user</filename></entry>
483 <entry>User units installed by the distribution package manager</entry>
484 </row>
485 <row>
486 <entry><filename>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/systemd/generator.late</filename></entry>
487 <entry>Generated units with low priority (see <replaceable>late-dir</replaceable> in <citerefentry
488 ><refentrytitle>systemd.generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
489 </row>
490 </tbody>
491 </tgroup>
492 </table>
493
494 <para>The set of load paths for the user manager instance may be augmented or
495 changed using various environment variables. And environment variables may in
496 turn be set using environment generators, see
497 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.environment-generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
498 In particular, <varname>$XDG_DATA_HOME</varname> and
499 <varname>$XDG_DATA_DIRS</varname> may be easily set using
500 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-environment-d-generator</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
501 Thus, directories listed here are just the defaults. To see the actual list that
502 would be used based on compilation options and current environment use
503 <programlisting>systemd-analyze --user unit-paths</programlisting>
504 </para>
505
506 <para>Moreover, additional units might be loaded into systemd from
507 directories not on the unit load path by creating a symlink pointing to a
508 unit file in the directories. You can use <command>systemctl link</command>
509 for this operation. See
510 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
511 for its usage and precaution.
512 </para>
513 </refsect1>
514
515 <refsect1>
516 <title>Unit Garbage Collection</title>
517
518 <para>The system and service manager loads a unit's configuration automatically when a unit is referenced for the
519 first time. It will automatically unload the unit configuration and state again when the unit is not needed anymore
520 ("garbage collection"). A unit may be referenced through a number of different mechanisms:</para>
521
522 <orderedlist>
523 <listitem><para>Another loaded unit references it with a dependency such as <varname>After=</varname>,
524 <varname>Wants=</varname>, …</para></listitem>
525
526 <listitem><para>The unit is currently starting, running, reloading or stopping.</para></listitem>
527
528 <listitem><para>The unit is currently in the <constant>failed</constant> state. (But see below.)</para></listitem>
529
530 <listitem><para>A job for the unit is pending.</para></listitem>
531
532 <listitem><para>The unit is pinned by an active IPC client program.</para></listitem>
533
534 <listitem><para>The unit is a special "perpetual" unit that is always active and loaded. Examples for perpetual
535 units are the root mount unit <filename>-.mount</filename> or the scope unit <filename>init.scope</filename> that
536 the service manager itself lives in.</para></listitem>
537
538 <listitem><para>The unit has running processes associated with it.</para></listitem>
539 </orderedlist>
540
541 <para>The garbage collection logic may be altered with the <varname>CollectMode=</varname> option, which allows
542 configuration whether automatic unloading of units that are in <constant>failed</constant> state is permissible,
543 see below.</para>
544
545 <para>Note that when a unit's configuration and state is unloaded, all execution results, such as exit codes, exit
546 signals, resource consumption and other statistics are lost, except for what is stored in the log subsystem.</para>
547
548 <para>Use <command>systemctl daemon-reload</command> or an equivalent command to reload unit configuration while
549 the unit is already loaded. In this case all configuration settings are flushed out and replaced with the new
550 configuration (which however might not be in effect immediately), however all runtime state is
551 saved/restored.</para>
552 </refsect1>
553
554 <refsect1>
555 <title>[Unit] Section Options</title>
556
557 <para>The unit file may include a [Unit] section, which carries
558 generic information about the unit that is not dependent on the
559 type of unit:</para>
560
561 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
562 <varlistentry>
563 <term><varname>Description=</varname></term>
564 <listitem><para>A short human readable title of the unit. This may be used by
565 <command>systemd</command> (and other UIs) as a user-visible label for the unit, so this string
566 should identify the unit rather than describe it, despite the name. This string also shouldn't just
567 repeat the unit name. <literal>Apache2 Web Server</literal> is a good example. Bad examples are
568 <literal>high-performance light-weight HTTP server</literal> (too generic) or
569 <literal>Apache2</literal> (meaningless for people who do not know Apache, duplicates the unit
570 name). <command>systemd</command> may use this string as a noun in status messages (<literal>Starting
571 <replaceable>description</replaceable>...</literal>, <literal>Started
572 <replaceable>description</replaceable>.</literal>, <literal>Reached target
573 <replaceable>description</replaceable>.</literal>, <literal>Failed to start
574 <replaceable>description</replaceable>.</literal>), so it should be capitalized, and should not be a
575 full sentence, or a phrase with a continuous verb. Bad examples include <literal>exiting the
576 container</literal> or <literal>updating the database once per day.</literal>.</para>
577 </listitem>
578 </varlistentry>
579
580 <varlistentry>
581 <term><varname>Documentation=</varname></term>
582 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of URIs referencing
583 documentation for this unit or its configuration. Accepted are
584 only URIs of the types <literal>http://</literal>,
585 <literal>https://</literal>, <literal>file:</literal>,
586 <literal>info:</literal>, <literal>man:</literal>. For more
587 information about the syntax of these URIs, see <citerefentry
588 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>uri</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
589 The URIs should be listed in order of relevance, starting with
590 the most relevant. It is a good idea to first reference
591 documentation that explains what the unit's purpose is,
592 followed by how it is configured, followed by any other
593 related documentation. This option may be specified more than
594 once, in which case the specified list of URIs is merged. If
595 the empty string is assigned to this option, the list is reset
596 and all prior assignments will have no
597 effect.</para></listitem>
598 </varlistentry>
599
600 <varlistentry>
601 <term><varname>Wants=</varname></term>
602
603 <listitem><para>Configures (weak) requirement dependencies on other units. This option may be
604 specified more than once or multiple space-separated units may be specified in one option in which
605 case dependencies for all listed names will be created. Dependencies of this type may also be
606 configured outside of the unit configuration file by adding a symlink to a
607 <filename>.wants/</filename> directory accompanying the unit file. For details, see above.</para>
608
609 <para>Units listed in this option will be started if the configuring unit is. However, if the listed
610 units fail to start or cannot be added to the transaction, this has no impact on the validity of the
611 transaction as a whole, and this unit will still be started. This is the recommended way to hook
612 the start-up of one unit to the start-up of another unit.</para>
613
614 <para>Note that requirement dependencies do not influence the order in which services are started or
615 stopped. This has to be configured independently with the <varname>After=</varname> or
616 <varname>Before=</varname> options. If unit <filename>foo.service</filename> pulls in unit
617 <filename>bar.service</filename> as configured with <varname>Wants=</varname> and no ordering is
618 configured with <varname>After=</varname> or <varname>Before=</varname>, then both units will be
619 started simultaneously and without any delay between them if <filename>foo.service</filename> is
620 activated.</para></listitem>
621 </varlistentry>
622
623 <varlistentry>
624 <term><varname>Requires=</varname></term>
625
626 <listitem><para>Similar to <varname>Wants=</varname>, but declares a stronger requirement
627 dependency. Dependencies of this type may also be configured by adding a symlink to a
628 <filename>.requires/</filename> directory accompanying the unit file.</para>
629
630 <para>If this unit gets activated, the units listed will be activated as well. If one of
631 the other units fails to activate, and an ordering dependency <varname>After=</varname> on the
632 failing unit is set, this unit will not be started. Besides, with or without specifying
633 <varname>After=</varname>, this unit will be stopped if one of the other units is explicitly
634 stopped.</para>
635
636 <para>Often, it is a better choice to use <varname>Wants=</varname> instead of
637 <varname>Requires=</varname> in order to achieve a system that is more robust when dealing with
638 failing services.</para>
639
640 <para>Note that this dependency type does not imply that the other unit always has to be in active state when
641 this unit is running. Specifically: failing condition checks (such as <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>,
642 <varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname>, … — see below) do not cause the start job of a unit with a
643 <varname>Requires=</varname> dependency on it to fail. Also, some unit types may deactivate on their own (for
644 example, a service process may decide to exit cleanly, or a device may be unplugged by the user), which is not
645 propagated to units having a <varname>Requires=</varname> dependency. Use the <varname>BindsTo=</varname>
646 dependency type together with <varname>After=</varname> to ensure that a unit may never be in active state
647 without a specific other unit also in active state (see below).</para></listitem>
648 </varlistentry>
649
650 <varlistentry>
651 <term><varname>Requisite=</varname></term>
652
653 <listitem><para>Similar to <varname>Requires=</varname>. However, if the units listed here
654 are not started already, they will not be started and the starting of this unit will fail
655 immediately. <varname>Requisite=</varname> does not imply an ordering dependency, even if
656 both units are started in the same transaction. Hence this setting should usually be
657 combined with <varname>After=</varname>, to ensure this unit is not started before the other
658 unit.</para>
659
660 <para>When <varname>Requisite=b.service</varname> is used on
661 <filename>a.service</filename>, this dependency will show as
662 <varname>RequisiteOf=a.service</varname> in property listing of
663 <filename>b.service</filename>. <varname>RequisiteOf=</varname>
664 dependency cannot be specified directly.</para>
665 </listitem>
666 </varlistentry>
667
668 <varlistentry>
669 <term><varname>BindsTo=</varname></term>
670
671 <listitem><para>Configures requirement dependencies, very similar in style to
672 <varname>Requires=</varname>. However, this dependency type is stronger: in addition to the effect of
673 <varname>Requires=</varname> it declares that if the unit bound to is stopped, this unit will be stopped
674 too. This means a unit bound to another unit that suddenly enters inactive state will be stopped too.
675 Units can suddenly, unexpectedly enter inactive state for different reasons: the main process of a service unit
676 might terminate on its own choice, the backing device of a device unit might be unplugged or the mount point of
677 a mount unit might be unmounted without involvement of the system and service manager.</para>
678
679 <para>When used in conjunction with <varname>After=</varname> on the same unit the behaviour of
680 <varname>BindsTo=</varname> is even stronger. In this case, the unit bound to strictly has to be in active
681 state for this unit to also be in active state. This not only means a unit bound to another unit that suddenly
682 enters inactive state, but also one that is bound to another unit that gets skipped due to a failed condition
683 check (such as <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>, <varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname>, … —
684 see below) will be stopped, should it be running. Hence, in many cases it is best to combine
685 <varname>BindsTo=</varname> with <varname>After=</varname>.</para>
686
687 <para>When <varname>BindsTo=b.service</varname> is used on
688 <filename>a.service</filename>, this dependency will show as
689 <varname>BoundBy=a.service</varname> in property listing of
690 <filename>b.service</filename>. <varname>BoundBy=</varname>
691 dependency cannot be specified directly.</para>
692 </listitem>
693 </varlistentry>
694
695 <varlistentry>
696 <term><varname>PartOf=</varname></term>
697
698 <listitem><para>Configures dependencies similar to
699 <varname>Requires=</varname>, but limited to stopping and
700 restarting of units. When systemd stops or restarts the units
701 listed here, the action is propagated to this unit. Note that
702 this is a one-way dependency — changes to this unit do not
703 affect the listed units.</para>
704
705 <para>When <varname>PartOf=b.service</varname> is used on
706 <filename>a.service</filename>, this dependency will show as
707 <varname>ConsistsOf=a.service</varname> in property listing of
708 <filename>b.service</filename>. <varname>ConsistsOf=</varname>
709 dependency cannot be specified directly.</para>
710 </listitem>
711 </varlistentry>
712
713 <varlistentry>
714 <term><varname>Upholds=</varname></term>
715
716 <listitem><para>Configures dependencies similar to <varname>Wants=</varname>, but as long as this unit
717 is up, all units listed in <varname>Upholds=</varname> are started whenever found to be inactive or
718 failed, and no job is queued for them. While a <varname>Wants=</varname> dependency on another unit
719 has a one-time effect when this units started, a <varname>Upholds=</varname> dependency on it has a
720 continuous effect, constantly restarting the unit if necessary. This is an alternative to the
721 <varname>Restart=</varname> setting of service units, to ensure they are kept running whatever
722 happens.</para>
723
724 <para>When <varname>Upholds=b.service</varname> is used on <filename>a.service</filename>, this
725 dependency will show as <varname>UpheldBy=a.service</varname> in the property listing of
726 <filename>b.service</filename>. The <varname>UpheldBy=</varname> dependency cannot be specified
727 directly.</para>
728 </listitem>
729 </varlistentry>
730
731 <varlistentry>
732 <term><varname>Conflicts=</varname></term>
733
734 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of unit names. Configures negative requirement
735 dependencies. If a unit has a <varname>Conflicts=</varname> setting on another unit, starting the
736 former will stop the latter and vice versa.</para>
737
738 <para>Note that this setting does not imply an ordering dependency, similarly to the
739 <varname>Wants=</varname> and <varname>Requires=</varname> dependencies described above. This means
740 that to ensure that the conflicting unit is stopped before the other unit is started, an
741 <varname>After=</varname> or <varname>Before=</varname> dependency must be declared. It doesn't
742 matter which of the two ordering dependencies is used, because stop jobs are always ordered before
743 start jobs, see the discussion in <varname>Before=</varname>/<varname>After=</varname> below.</para>
744
745 <para>If unit A that conflicts with unit B is scheduled to
746 be started at the same time as B, the transaction will either
747 fail (in case both are required parts of the transaction) or be
748 modified to be fixed (in case one or both jobs are not a
749 required part of the transaction). In the latter case, the job
750 that is not required will be removed, or in case both are
751 not required, the unit that conflicts will be started and the
752 unit that is conflicted is stopped.</para></listitem>
753 </varlistentry>
754
755 <varlistentry>
756 <term><varname>Before=</varname></term>
757 <term><varname>After=</varname></term>
758
759 <listitem><para>These two settings expect a space-separated list of unit names. They may be specified
760 more than once, in which case dependencies for all listed names are created.</para>
761
762 <para>Those two settings configure ordering dependencies between units. If unit
763 <filename>foo.service</filename> contains the setting <option>Before=bar.service</option> and both
764 units are being started, <filename>bar.service</filename>'s start-up is delayed until
765 <filename>foo.service</filename> has finished starting up. <varname>After=</varname> is the inverse
766 of <varname>Before=</varname>, i.e. while <varname>Before=</varname> ensures that the configured unit
767 is started before the listed unit begins starting up, <varname>After=</varname> ensures the opposite,
768 that the listed unit is fully started up before the configured unit is started.</para>
769
770 <para>When two units with an ordering dependency between them are shut down, the inverse of the
771 start-up order is applied. I.e. if a unit is configured with <varname>After=</varname> on another
772 unit, the former is stopped before the latter if both are shut down. Given two units with any
773 ordering dependency between them, if one unit is shut down and the other is started up, the shutdown
774 is ordered before the start-up. It doesn't matter if the ordering dependency is
775 <varname>After=</varname> or <varname>Before=</varname>, in this case. It also doesn't matter which
776 of the two is shut down, as long as one is shut down and the other is started up; the shutdown is
777 ordered before the start-up in all cases. If two units have no ordering dependencies between them,
778 they are shut down or started up simultaneously, and no ordering takes place. It depends on the unit
779 type when precisely a unit has finished starting up. Most importantly, for service units start-up is
780 considered completed for the purpose of <varname>Before=</varname>/<varname>After=</varname> when all
781 its configured start-up commands have been invoked and they either failed or reported start-up
782 success. Note that this does includes <varname>ExecStartPost=</varname> (or
783 <varname>ExecStopPost=</varname> for the shutdown case).</para>
784
785 <para>Note that those settings are independent of and orthogonal to the requirement dependencies as
786 configured by <varname>Requires=</varname>, <varname>Wants=</varname>, <varname>Requisite=</varname>,
787 or <varname>BindsTo=</varname>. It is a common pattern to include a unit name in both the
788 <varname>After=</varname> and <varname>Wants=</varname> options, in which case the unit listed will
789 be started before the unit that is configured with these options.</para>
790
791 <para>Note that <varname>Before=</varname> dependencies on device units have no effect and are not
792 supported. Devices generally become available as a result of an external hotplug event, and systemd
793 creates the corresponding device unit without delay.</para></listitem>
794 </varlistentry>
795
796 <varlistentry>
797 <term><varname>OnFailure=</varname></term>
798
799 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of one or more units that are activated when this unit enters
800 the <literal>failed</literal> state. A service unit using <varname>Restart=</varname> enters the
801 failed state only after the start limits are reached.</para></listitem>
802 </varlistentry>
803
804 <varlistentry>
805 <term><varname>OnSuccess=</varname></term>
806
807 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of one or more units that are activated when this unit enters
808 the <literal>inactive</literal> state.</para></listitem>
809 </varlistentry>
810
811 <varlistentry>
812 <term><varname>PropagatesReloadTo=</varname></term>
813 <term><varname>ReloadPropagatedFrom=</varname></term>
814
815 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of one or more units to which reload requests from this unit
816 shall be propagated to, or units from which reload requests shall be propagated to this unit,
817 respectively. Issuing a reload request on a unit will automatically also enqueue reload requests on
818 all units that are linked to it using these two settings.</para></listitem>
819 </varlistentry>
820
821 <varlistentry>
822 <term><varname>PropagatesStopTo=</varname></term>
823 <term><varname>StopPropagatedFrom=</varname></term>
824
825 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of one or more units to which stop requests from this unit
826 shall be propagated to, or units from which stop requests shall be propagated to this unit,
827 respectively. Issuing a stop request on a unit will automatically also enqueue stop requests on all
828 units that are linked to it using these two settings.</para></listitem>
829 </varlistentry>
830
831 <varlistentry>
832 <term><varname>JoinsNamespaceOf=</varname></term>
833
834 <listitem><para>For units that start processes (such as service units), lists one or more other units
835 whose network and/or temporary file namespace to join. This only applies to unit types which support
836 the <varname>PrivateNetwork=</varname>, <varname>NetworkNamespacePath=</varname>,
837 <varname>PrivateIPC=</varname>, <varname>IPCNamespacePath=</varname>, and
838 <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname> directives (see
839 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.exec</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
840 details). If a unit that has this setting set is started, its processes will see the same
841 <filename>/tmp/</filename>, <filename>/var/tmp/</filename>, IPC namespace and network namespace as
842 one listed unit that is started. If multiple listed units are already started, it is not defined
843 which namespace is joined. Note that this setting only has an effect if
844 <varname>PrivateNetwork=</varname>/<varname>NetworkNamespacePath=</varname>,
845 <varname>PrivateIPC=</varname>/<varname>IPCNamespacePath=</varname> and/or
846 <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname> is enabled for both the unit that joins the namespace and the unit
847 whose namespace is joined.</para></listitem>
848 </varlistentry>
849
850 <varlistentry>
851 <term><varname>RequiresMountsFor=</varname></term>
852
853 <listitem><para>Takes a space-separated list of absolute
854 paths. Automatically adds dependencies of type
855 <varname>Requires=</varname> and <varname>After=</varname> for
856 all mount units required to access the specified path.</para>
857
858 <para>Mount points marked with <option>noauto</option> are not
859 mounted automatically through <filename>local-fs.target</filename>,
860 but are still honored for the purposes of this option, i.e. they
861 will be pulled in by this unit.</para></listitem>
862 </varlistentry>
863
864 <varlistentry>
865 <term><varname>OnFailureJobMode=</varname></term>
866
867 <listitem><para>Takes a value of
868 <literal>fail</literal>,
869 <literal>replace</literal>,
870 <literal>replace-irreversibly</literal>,
871 <literal>isolate</literal>,
872 <literal>flush</literal>,
873 <literal>ignore-dependencies</literal> or
874 <literal>ignore-requirements</literal>. Defaults to
875 <literal>replace</literal>. Specifies how the units listed in
876 <varname>OnFailure=</varname> will be enqueued. See
877 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>'s
878 <option>--job-mode=</option> option for details on the
879 possible values. If this is set to <literal>isolate</literal>,
880 only a single unit may be listed in
881 <varname>OnFailure=</varname>.</para></listitem>
882 </varlistentry>
883
884 <varlistentry>
885 <term><varname>IgnoreOnIsolate=</varname></term>
886
887 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If <option>true</option>, this unit will not be stopped
888 when isolating another unit. Defaults to <option>false</option> for service, target, socket, timer,
889 and path units, and <option>true</option> for slice, scope, device, swap, mount, and automount
890 units.</para></listitem>
891 </varlistentry>
892
893 <varlistentry>
894 <term><varname>StopWhenUnneeded=</varname></term>
895
896 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If
897 <option>true</option>, this unit will be stopped when it is no
898 longer used. Note that, in order to minimize the work to be
899 executed, systemd will not stop units by default unless they
900 are conflicting with other units, or the user explicitly
901 requested their shut down. If this option is set, a unit will
902 be automatically cleaned up if no other active unit requires
903 it. Defaults to <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
904 </varlistentry>
905
906 <varlistentry>
907 <term><varname>RefuseManualStart=</varname></term>
908 <term><varname>RefuseManualStop=</varname></term>
909
910 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If
911 <option>true</option>, this unit can only be activated or
912 deactivated indirectly. In this case, explicit start-up or
913 termination requested by the user is denied, however if it is
914 started or stopped as a dependency of another unit, start-up
915 or termination will succeed. This is mostly a safety feature
916 to ensure that the user does not accidentally activate units
917 that are not intended to be activated explicitly, and not
918 accidentally deactivate units that are not intended to be
919 deactivated. These options default to
920 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
921 </varlistentry>
922
923 <varlistentry>
924 <term><varname>AllowIsolate=</varname></term>
925
926 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If
927 <option>true</option>, this unit may be used with the
928 <command>systemctl isolate</command> command. Otherwise, this
929 will be refused. It probably is a good idea to leave this
930 disabled except for target units that shall be used similar to
931 runlevels in SysV init systems, just as a precaution to avoid
932 unusable system states. This option defaults to
933 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
934 </varlistentry>
935
936 <varlistentry>
937 <term><varname>DefaultDependencies=</varname></term>
938
939 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If
940 <option>yes</option>, (the default), a few default
941 dependencies will implicitly be created for the unit. The
942 actual dependencies created depend on the unit type. For
943 example, for service units, these dependencies ensure that the
944 service is started only after basic system initialization is
945 completed and is properly terminated on system shutdown. See
946 the respective man pages for details. Generally, only services
947 involved with early boot or late shutdown should set this
948 option to <option>no</option>. It is highly recommended to
949 leave this option enabled for the majority of common units. If
950 set to <option>no</option>, this option does not disable
951 all implicit dependencies, just non-essential
952 ones.</para></listitem>
953 </varlistentry>
954
955 <varlistentry>
956 <term><varname>CollectMode=</varname></term>
957
958 <listitem><para>Tweaks the "garbage collection" algorithm for this unit. Takes one of <option>inactive</option>
959 or <option>inactive-or-failed</option>. If set to <option>inactive</option> the unit will be unloaded if it is
960 in the <constant>inactive</constant> state and is not referenced by clients, jobs or other units — however it
961 is not unloaded if it is in the <constant>failed</constant> state. In <option>failed</option> mode, failed
962 units are not unloaded until the user invoked <command>systemctl reset-failed</command> on them to reset the
963 <constant>failed</constant> state, or an equivalent command. This behaviour is altered if this option is set to
964 <option>inactive-or-failed</option>: in this case the unit is unloaded even if the unit is in a
965 <constant>failed</constant> state, and thus an explicitly resetting of the <constant>failed</constant> state is
966 not necessary. Note that if this mode is used unit results (such as exit codes, exit signals, consumed
967 resources, …) are flushed out immediately after the unit completed, except for what is stored in the logging
968 subsystem. Defaults to <option>inactive</option>.</para>
969 </listitem>
970 </varlistentry>
971
972 <varlistentry>
973 <term><varname>FailureAction=</varname></term>
974 <term><varname>SuccessAction=</varname></term>
975
976 <listitem><para>Configure the action to take when the unit stops and enters a failed state or inactive state.
977 Takes one of <option>none</option>, <option>reboot</option>, <option>reboot-force</option>,
978 <option>reboot-immediate</option>, <option>poweroff</option>, <option>poweroff-force</option>,
979 <option>poweroff-immediate</option>, <option>exit</option>, and <option>exit-force</option>. In system mode,
980 all options are allowed. In user mode, only <option>none</option>, <option>exit</option>, and
981 <option>exit-force</option> are allowed. Both options default to <option>none</option>.</para>
982
983 <para>If <option>none</option> is set, no action will be triggered. <option>reboot</option> causes a reboot
984 following the normal shutdown procedure (i.e. equivalent to <command>systemctl reboot</command>).
985 <option>reboot-force</option> causes a forced reboot which will terminate all processes forcibly but should
986 cause no dirty file systems on reboot (i.e. equivalent to <command>systemctl reboot -f</command>) and
987 <option>reboot-immediate</option> causes immediate execution of the
988 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>reboot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system call, which
989 might result in data loss (i.e. equivalent to <command>systemctl reboot -ff</command>). Similarly,
990 <option>poweroff</option>, <option>poweroff-force</option>, <option>poweroff-immediate</option> have the effect
991 of powering down the system with similar semantics. <option>exit</option> causes the manager to exit following
992 the normal shutdown procedure, and <option>exit-force</option> causes it terminate without shutting down
993 services. When <option>exit</option> or <option>exit-force</option> is used by default the exit status of the
994 main process of the unit (if this applies) is returned from the service manager. However, this may be overridden
995 with <varname>FailureActionExitStatus=</varname>/<varname>SuccessActionExitStatus=</varname>, see
996 below.</para></listitem>
997 </varlistentry>
998
999 <varlistentry>
1000 <term><varname>FailureActionExitStatus=</varname></term>
1001 <term><varname>SuccessActionExitStatus=</varname></term>
1002
1003 <listitem><para>Controls the exit status to propagate back to an invoking container manager (in case of a
1004 system service) or service manager (in case of a user manager) when the
1005 <varname>FailureAction=</varname>/<varname>SuccessAction=</varname> are set to <option>exit</option> or
1006 <option>exit-force</option> and the action is triggered. By default the exit status of the main process of the
1007 triggering unit (if this applies) is propagated. Takes a value in the range 0255 or the empty string to
1008 request default behaviour.</para></listitem>
1009 </varlistentry>
1010
1011 <varlistentry>
1012 <term><varname>JobTimeoutSec=</varname></term>
1013 <term><varname>JobRunningTimeoutSec=</varname></term>
1014
1015 <listitem><para><varname>JobTimeoutSec=</varname> specifies a timeout for the whole job that starts
1016 running when the job is queued. <varname>JobRunningTimeoutSec=</varname> specifies a timeout that
1017 starts running when the queued job is actually started. If either limit is reached, the job will be
1018 cancelled, the unit however will not change state or even enter the <literal>failed</literal> mode.
1019 </para>
1020
1021 <para>Both settings take a time span with the default unit of seconds, but other units may be
1022 specified, see
1023 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
1024 The default is <literal>infinity</literal> (job timeouts disabled), except for device units where
1025 <varname>JobRunningTimeoutSec=</varname> defaults to <varname>DefaultTimeoutStartSec=</varname>.
1026 </para>
1027
1028 <para>Note: these timeouts are independent from any unit-specific timeouts (for example, the timeout
1029 set with <varname>TimeoutStartSec=</varname> in service units). The job timeout has no effect on the
1030 unit itself. Or in other words: unit-specific timeouts are useful to abort unit state changes, and
1031 revert them. The job timeout set with this option however is useful to abort only the job waiting for
1032 the unit state to change.</para>
1033 </listitem>
1034 </varlistentry>
1035
1036 <varlistentry>
1037 <term><varname>JobTimeoutAction=</varname></term>
1038 <term><varname>JobTimeoutRebootArgument=</varname></term>
1039
1040 <listitem><para><varname>JobTimeoutAction=</varname> optionally configures an additional action to
1041 take when the timeout is hit, see description of <varname>JobTimeoutSec=</varname> and
1042 <varname>JobRunningTimeoutSec=</varname> above. It takes the same values as
1043 <varname>StartLimitAction=</varname>. Defaults to <option>none</option>.</para>
1044
1045 <para><varname>JobTimeoutRebootArgument=</varname> configures an optional reboot string to pass to
1046 the <citerefentry><refentrytitle>reboot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system
1047 call.</para></listitem>
1048 </varlistentry>
1049
1050 <varlistentry>
1051 <term><varname>StartLimitIntervalSec=<replaceable>interval</replaceable></varname></term>
1052 <term><varname>StartLimitBurst=<replaceable>burst</replaceable></varname></term>
1053
1054 <listitem><para>Configure unit start rate limiting. Units which are started more than
1055 <replaceable>burst</replaceable> times within an <replaceable>interval</replaceable> time span are
1056 not permitted to start any more. Use <varname>StartLimitIntervalSec=</varname> to configure the
1057 checking interval and <varname>StartLimitBurst=</varname> to configure how many starts per interval
1058 are allowed.</para>
1059
1060 <para><replaceable>interval</replaceable> is a time span with the default unit of seconds, but other
1061 units may be specified, see
1062 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
1063 Defaults to <varname>DefaultStartLimitIntervalSec=</varname> in manager configuration file, and may
1064 be set to 0 to disable any kind of rate limiting. <replaceable>burst</replaceable> is a number and
1065 defaults to <varname>DefaultStartLimitBurst=</varname> in manager configuration file.</para>
1066
1067 <para>These configuration options are particularly useful in conjunction with the service setting
1068 <varname>Restart=</varname> (see
1069 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>);
1070 however, they apply to all kinds of starts (including manual), not just those triggered by the
1071 <varname>Restart=</varname> logic.</para>
1072
1073 <para>Note that units which are configured for <varname>Restart=</varname>, and which reach the start
1074 limit are not attempted to be restarted anymore; however, they may still be restarted manually or
1075 from a timer or socket at a later point, after the <replaceable>interval</replaceable> has passed.
1076 From that point on, the restart logic is activated again. <command>systemctl reset-failed</command>
1077 will cause the restart rate counter for a service to be flushed, which is useful if the administrator
1078 wants to manually start a unit and the start limit interferes with that. Rate-limiting is enforced
1079 after any unit condition checks are executed, and hence unit activations with failing conditions do
1080 not count towards the rate limit.</para>
1081
1082 <para>When a unit is unloaded due to the garbage collection logic (see above) its rate limit counters
1083 are flushed out too. This means that configuring start rate limiting for a unit that is not
1084 referenced continuously has no effect.</para>
1085
1086 <para>This setting does not apply to slice, target, device, and scope units, since they are unit
1087 types whose activation may either never fail, or may succeed only a single time.</para></listitem>
1088 </varlistentry>
1089
1090 <varlistentry>
1091 <term><varname>StartLimitAction=</varname></term>
1092
1093 <listitem><para>Configure an additional action to take if the rate limit configured with
1094 <varname>StartLimitIntervalSec=</varname> and <varname>StartLimitBurst=</varname> is hit. Takes the same
1095 values as the <varname>FailureAction=</varname>/<varname>SuccessAction=</varname> settings. If
1096 <option>none</option> is set, hitting the rate limit will trigger no action except that
1097 the start will not be permitted. Defaults to <option>none</option>.</para></listitem>
1098 </varlistentry>
1099
1100 <varlistentry>
1101 <term><varname>RebootArgument=</varname></term>
1102 <listitem><para>Configure the optional argument for the
1103 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>reboot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system call if
1104 <varname>StartLimitAction=</varname> or <varname>FailureAction=</varname> is a reboot action. This
1105 works just like the optional argument to <command>systemctl reboot</command> command.</para></listitem>
1106 </varlistentry>
1107
1108 <varlistentry>
1109 <term><varname>SourcePath=</varname></term>
1110 <listitem><para>A path to a configuration file this unit has
1111 been generated from. This is primarily useful for
1112 implementation of generator tools that convert configuration
1113 from an external configuration file format into native unit
1114 files. This functionality should not be used in normal
1115 units.</para></listitem>
1116 </varlistentry>
1117 </variablelist>
1118
1119 <refsect2>
1120 <title>Conditions and Asserts</title>
1121
1122 <para>Unit files may also include a number of <varname index="false">Condition…=</varname> and <varname
1123 index="false">Assert…=</varname> settings. Before the unit is started, systemd will verify that the
1124 specified conditions and asserts are true. If not, the starting of the unit will be (mostly silently)
1125 skipped (in case of conditions), or aborted with an error message (in case of asserts). Failing
1126 conditions or asserts will not result in the unit being moved into the <literal>failed</literal>
1127 state. The conditions and asserts are checked at the time the queued start job is to be executed. The
1128 ordering dependencies are still respected, so other units are still pulled in and ordered as if this
1129 unit was successfully activated, and the conditions and asserts are executed the precise moment the
1130 unit would normally start and thus can validate system state after the units ordered before completed
1131 initialization. Use condition expressions for skipping units that do not apply to the local system, for
1132 example because the kernel or runtime environment doesn't require their functionality.
1133 </para>
1134
1135 <para>If multiple conditions are specified, the unit will be executed if all of them apply (i.e. a
1136 logical AND is applied). Condition checks can use a pipe symbol (<literal>|</literal>) after the equals
1137 sign (<literal>Condition…=|…</literal>), which causes the condition to become a
1138 <emphasis>triggering</emphasis> condition. If at least one triggering condition is defined for a unit,
1139 then the unit will be started if at least one of the triggering conditions of the unit applies and all
1140 of the regular (i.e. non-triggering) conditions apply. If you prefix an argument with the pipe symbol
1141 and an exclamation mark, the pipe symbol must be passed first, the exclamation second. If any of these
1142 options is assigned the empty string, the list of conditions is reset completely, all previous
1143 condition settings (of any kind) will have no effect.</para>
1144
1145 <para>The <varname>AssertArchitecture=</varname>, <varname>AssertVirtualization=</varname>, … options
1146 are similar to conditions but cause the start job to fail (instead of being skipped). The failed check
1147 is logged. Units with failed conditions are considered to be in a clean state and will be garbage
1148 collected if they are not referenced. This means that when queried, the condition failure may or may
1149 not show up in the state of the unit.</para>
1150
1151 <para>Note that neither assertion nor condition expressions result in unit state changes. Also note
1152 that both are checked at the time the job is to be executed, i.e. long after depending jobs and it
1153 itself were queued. Thus, neither condition nor assertion expressions are suitable for conditionalizing
1154 unit dependencies.</para>
1155
1156 <para>The <command>condition</command> verb of
1157 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-analyze</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> can
1158 be used to test condition and assert expressions.</para>
1159
1160 <para>Except for <varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname>, all path checks follow symlinks.</para>
1161
1162 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
1163 <varlistentry>
1164 <term><varname>ConditionArchitecture=</varname></term>
1165
1166 <listitem><para>Check whether the system is running on a specific architecture. Takes one of
1167 <literal>x86</literal>,
1168 <literal>x86-64</literal>,
1169 <literal>ppc</literal>,
1170 <literal>ppc-le</literal>,
1171 <literal>ppc64</literal>,
1172 <literal>ppc64-le</literal>,
1173 <literal>ia64</literal>,
1174 <literal>parisc</literal>,
1175 <literal>parisc64</literal>,
1176 <literal>s390</literal>,
1177 <literal>s390x</literal>,
1178 <literal>sparc</literal>,
1179 <literal>sparc64</literal>,
1180 <literal>mips</literal>,
1181 <literal>mips-le</literal>,
1182 <literal>mips64</literal>,
1183 <literal>mips64-le</literal>,
1184 <literal>alpha</literal>,
1185 <literal>arm</literal>,
1186 <literal>arm-be</literal>,
1187 <literal>arm64</literal>,
1188 <literal>arm64-be</literal>,
1189 <literal>sh</literal>,
1190 <literal>sh64</literal>,
1191 <literal>m68k</literal>,
1192 <literal>tilegx</literal>,
1193 <literal>cris</literal>,
1194 <literal>arc</literal>,
1195 <literal>arc-be</literal>, or
1196 <literal>native</literal>.</para>
1197
1198 <para>The architecture is determined from the information returned by
1199 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>uname</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1200 and is thus subject to
1201 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>personality</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
1202 Note that a <varname>Personality=</varname> setting in the same unit file has no effect on this
1203 condition. A special architecture name <literal>native</literal> is mapped to the architecture the
1204 system manager itself is compiled for. The test may be negated by prepending an exclamation
1205 mark.</para>
1206 </listitem>
1207 </varlistentry>
1208
1209 <varlistentry>
1210 <term><varname>ConditionFirmware=</varname></term>
1211
1212 <listitem><para>Check whether the system's firmware is of a certain type. Possible values are:
1213 <literal>uefi</literal> (for systems with EFI),
1214 <literal>device-tree</literal> (for systems with a device tree) and
1215 <literal>device-tree-compatible(xyz)</literal> (for systems with a device tree that is compatible to <literal>xyz</literal>).</para>
1216 </listitem>
1217 </varlistentry>
1218
1219 <varlistentry>
1220 <term><varname>ConditionVirtualization=</varname></term>
1221
1222 <listitem><para>Check whether the system is executed in a virtualized environment and optionally
1223 test whether it is a specific implementation. Takes either boolean value to check if being executed
1224 in any virtualized environment, or one of
1225 <literal>vm</literal> and
1226 <literal>container</literal> to test against a generic type of virtualization solution, or one of
1227 <literal>qemu</literal>,
1228 <literal>kvm</literal>,
1229 <literal>amazon</literal>,
1230 <literal>zvm</literal>,
1231 <literal>vmware</literal>,
1232 <literal>microsoft</literal>,
1233 <literal>oracle</literal>,
1234 <literal>powervm</literal>,
1235 <literal>xen</literal>,
1236 <literal>bochs</literal>,
1237 <literal>uml</literal>,
1238 <literal>bhyve</literal>,
1239 <literal>qnx</literal>,
1240 <literal>openvz</literal>,
1241 <literal>lxc</literal>,
1242 <literal>lxc-libvirt</literal>,
1243 <literal>systemd-nspawn</literal>,
1244 <literal>docker</literal>,
1245 <literal>podman</literal>,
1246 <literal>rkt</literal>,
1247 <literal>wsl</literal>,
1248 <literal>proot</literal>,
1249 <literal>pouch</literal>,
1250 <literal>acrn</literal> to test
1251 against a specific implementation, or
1252 <literal>private-users</literal> to check whether we are running in a user namespace. See
1253 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-detect-virt</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1254 for a full list of known virtualization technologies and their identifiers. If multiple
1255 virtualization technologies are nested, only the innermost is considered. The test may be negated
1256 by prepending an exclamation mark.</para>
1257 </listitem>
1258 </varlistentry>
1259
1260 <varlistentry>
1261 <term><varname>ConditionHost=</varname></term>
1262
1263 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionHost=</varname> may be used to match against the hostname or
1264 machine ID of the host. This either takes a hostname string (optionally with shell style globs)
1265 which is tested against the locally set hostname as returned by
1266 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>gethostname</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, or
1267 a machine ID formatted as string (see
1268 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>machine-id</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>).
1269 The test may be negated by prepending an exclamation mark.</para>
1270 </listitem>
1271 </varlistentry>
1272
1273 <varlistentry>
1274 <term><varname>ConditionKernelCommandLine=</varname></term>
1275
1276 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionKernelCommandLine=</varname> may be used to check whether a
1277 specific kernel command line option is set (or if prefixed with the exclamation mark — unset). The
1278 argument must either be a single word, or an assignment (i.e. two words, separated by
1279 <literal>=</literal>). In the former case the kernel command line is searched for the word
1280 appearing as is, or as left hand side of an assignment. In the latter case, the exact assignment is
1281 looked for with right and left hand side matching. This operates on the kernel command line
1282 communicated to userspace via <filename>/proc/cmdline</filename>, except when the service manager
1283 is invoked as payload of a container manager, in which case the command line of <filename>PID
1284 1</filename> is used instead (i.e. <filename>/proc/1/cmdline</filename>).</para>
1285 </listitem>
1286 </varlistentry>
1287
1288 <varlistentry>
1289 <term><varname>ConditionKernelVersion=</varname></term>
1290
1291 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionKernelVersion=</varname> may be used to check whether the kernel
1292 version (as reported by <command>uname -r</command>) matches a certain expression (or if prefixed
1293 with the exclamation mark does not match it). The argument must be a list of (potentially quoted)
1294 expressions. For each of the expressions, if it starts with one of <literal>&lt;</literal>,
1295 <literal>&lt;=</literal>, <literal>=</literal>, <literal>!=</literal>, <literal>&gt;=</literal>,
1296 <literal>&gt;</literal> a relative version comparison is done, otherwise the specified string is
1297 matched with shell-style globs.</para>
1298
1299 <para>Note that using the kernel version string is an unreliable way to determine which features
1300 are supported by a kernel, because of the widespread practice of backporting drivers, features, and
1301 fixes from newer upstream kernels into older versions provided by distributions. Hence, this check
1302 is inherently unportable and should not be used for units which may be used on different
1303 distributions.</para>
1304 </listitem>
1305 </varlistentry>
1306
1307 <varlistentry>
1308 <term><varname>ConditionEnvironment=</varname></term>
1309
1310 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionEnvironment=</varname> may be used to check whether a specific
1311 environment variable is set (or if prefixed with the exclamation mark — unset) in the service
1312 manager's environment block.
1313
1314 The argument may be a single word, to check if the variable with this name is defined in the
1315 environment block, or an assignment
1316 (<literal><replaceable>name</replaceable>=<replaceable>value</replaceable></literal>), to check if
1317 the variable with this exact value is defined. Note that the environment block of the service
1318 manager itself is checked, i.e. not any variables defined with <varname>Environment=</varname> or
1319 <varname>EnvironmentFile=</varname>, as described above. This is particularly useful when the
1320 service manager runs inside a containerized environment or as per-user service manager, in order to
1321 check for variables passed in by the enclosing container manager or PAM.</para>
1322 </listitem>
1323 </varlistentry>
1324
1325 <varlistentry>
1326 <term><varname>ConditionSecurity=</varname></term>
1327
1328 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionSecurity=</varname> may be used to check whether the given
1329 security technology is enabled on the system. Currently, the recognized values are
1330 <literal>selinux</literal>, <literal>apparmor</literal>, <literal>tomoyo</literal>,
1331 <literal>ima</literal>, <literal>smack</literal>, <literal>audit</literal>,
1332 <literal>uefi-secureboot</literal> and <literal>tpm2</literal>. The test may be negated by prepending
1333 an exclamation mark.</para>
1334 </listitem>
1335 </varlistentry>
1336
1337 <varlistentry>
1338 <term><varname>ConditionCapability=</varname></term>
1339
1340 <listitem><para>Check whether the given capability exists in the capability bounding set of the
1341 service manager (i.e. this does not check whether capability is actually available in the permitted
1342 or effective sets, see
1343 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1344 for details). Pass a capability name such as <literal>CAP_MKNOD</literal>, possibly prefixed with
1345 an exclamation mark to negate the check.</para>
1346 </listitem>
1347 </varlistentry>
1348
1349 <varlistentry>
1350 <term><varname>ConditionACPower=</varname></term>
1351
1352 <listitem><para>Check whether the system has AC power, or is exclusively battery powered at the
1353 time of activation of the unit. This takes a boolean argument. If set to <literal>true</literal>,
1354 the condition will hold only if at least one AC connector of the system is connected to a power
1355 source, or if no AC connectors are known. Conversely, if set to <literal>false</literal>, the
1356 condition will hold only if there is at least one AC connector known and all AC connectors are
1357 disconnected from a power source.</para>
1358 </listitem>
1359 </varlistentry>
1360
1361 <varlistentry>
1362 <term><varname>ConditionNeedsUpdate=</varname></term>
1363
1364 <listitem><para>Takes one of <filename>/var/</filename> or <filename>/etc/</filename> as argument,
1365 possibly prefixed with a <literal>!</literal> (to invert the condition). This condition may be
1366 used to conditionalize units on whether the specified directory requires an update because
1367 <filename>/usr/</filename>'s modification time is newer than the stamp file
1368 <filename>.updated</filename> in the specified directory. This is useful to implement offline
1369 updates of the vendor operating system resources in <filename>/usr/</filename> that require updating
1370 of <filename>/etc/</filename> or <filename>/var/</filename> on the next following boot. Units making
1371 use of this condition should order themselves before
1372 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-update-done.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1373 to make sure they run before the stamp file's modification time gets reset indicating a completed
1374 update.</para>
1375
1376 <para>If the <varname>systemd.condition-needs-update=</varname> option is specified on the kernel
1377 command line (taking a boolean), it will override the result of this condition check, taking
1378 precedence over any file modification time checks. If the kernel command line option is used,
1379 <filename>systemd-update-done.service</filename> will not have immediate effect on any following
1380 <varname>ConditionNeedsUpdate=</varname> checks, until the system is rebooted where the kernel
1381 command line option is not specified anymore.</para>
1382
1383 <para>Note that to make this scheme effective, the timestamp of <filename>/usr/</filename> should
1384 be explicitly updated after its contents are modified. The kernel will automatically update
1385 modification timestamp on a directory only when immediate children of a directory are modified; an
1386 modification of nested files will not automatically result in mtime of <filename>/usr/</filename>
1387 being updated.</para>
1388
1389 <para>Also note that if the update method includes a call to execute appropriate post-update steps
1390 itself, it should not touch the timestamp of <filename>/usr/</filename>. In a typical distribution
1391 packaging scheme, packages will do any required update steps as part of the installation or
1392 upgrade, to make package contents immediately usable. <varname>ConditionNeedsUpdate=</varname>
1393 should be used with other update mechanisms where such an immediate update does not
1394 happen.</para></listitem>
1395 </varlistentry>
1396
1397 <varlistentry>
1398 <term><varname>ConditionFirstBoot=</varname></term>
1399
1400 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. This condition may be used to conditionalize units on
1401 whether the system is booting up for the first time. This roughly means that <filename>/etc/</filename>
1402 is unpopulated (for details, see "First Boot Semantics" in
1403 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>machine-id</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>).
1404 This may be used to populate <filename>/etc/</filename> on the first boot after factory reset, or
1405 when a new system instance boots up for the first time.</para>
1406
1407 <para>For robustness, units with <varname>ConditionFirstBoot=yes</varname> should order themselves
1408 before <filename>first-boot-complete.target</filename> and pull in this passive target with
1409 <varname>Wants=</varname>. This ensures that in a case of an aborted first boot, these units will
1410 be re-run during the next system startup.</para>
1411
1412 <para>If the <varname>systemd.condition-first-boot=</varname> option is specified on the kernel
1413 command line (taking a boolean), it will override the result of this condition check, taking
1414 precedence over <filename>/etc/machine-id</filename> existence checks.</para>
1415 </listitem>
1416 </varlistentry>
1417
1418 <varlistentry>
1419 <term><varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname></term>
1420
1421 <listitem><para>Check for the existence of a file. If the specified absolute path name does not exist,
1422 the condition will fail. If the absolute path name passed to
1423 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> is prefixed with an exclamation mark
1424 (<literal>!</literal>), the test is negated, and the unit is only started if the path does not
1425 exist.</para>
1426 </listitem>
1427 </varlistentry>
1428
1429 <varlistentry>
1430 <term><varname>ConditionPathExistsGlob=</varname></term>
1431
1432 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionPathExistsGlob=</varname> is similar to
1433 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>, but checks for the existence of at least one file or
1434 directory matching the specified globbing pattern.</para>
1435 </listitem>
1436 </varlistentry>
1437
1438 <varlistentry>
1439 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsDirectory=</varname></term>
1440
1441 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionPathIsDirectory=</varname> is similar to
1442 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that a certain path exists and is a
1443 directory.</para>
1444 </listitem>
1445 </varlistentry>
1446
1447 <varlistentry>
1448 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname></term>
1449
1450 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname> is similar to
1451 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that a certain path exists and is a symbolic
1452 link.</para>
1453 </listitem>
1454 </varlistentry>
1455
1456 <varlistentry>
1457 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsMountPoint=</varname></term>
1458
1459 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionPathIsMountPoint=</varname> is similar to
1460 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that a certain path exists and is a mount
1461 point.</para>
1462 </listitem>
1463 </varlistentry>
1464
1465 <varlistentry>
1466 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsReadWrite=</varname></term>
1467
1468 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionPathIsReadWrite=</varname> is similar to
1469 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that the underlying file system is readable
1470 and writable (i.e. not mounted read-only).</para>
1471 </listitem>
1472 </varlistentry>
1473
1474 <varlistentry>
1475 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsEncrypted=</varname></term>
1476
1477 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionPathIsEncrypted=</varname> is similar to
1478 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that the underlying file system's backing
1479 block device is encrypted using dm-crypt/LUKS. Note that this check does not cover ext4
1480 per-directory encryption, and only detects block level encryption. Moreover, if the specified path
1481 resides on a file system on top of a loopback block device, only encryption above the loopback device is
1482 detected. It is not detected whether the file system backing the loopback block device is encrypted.</para>
1483 </listitem>
1484 </varlistentry>
1485
1486 <varlistentry>
1487 <term><varname>ConditionDirectoryNotEmpty=</varname></term>
1488
1489 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionDirectoryNotEmpty=</varname> is similar to
1490 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that a certain path exists and is a non-empty
1491 directory.</para>
1492 </listitem>
1493 </varlistentry>
1494
1495 <varlistentry>
1496 <term><varname>ConditionFileNotEmpty=</varname></term>
1497
1498 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionFileNotEmpty=</varname> is similar to
1499 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that a certain path exists and refers to a
1500 regular file with a non-zero size.</para>
1501 </listitem>
1502 </varlistentry>
1503
1504 <varlistentry>
1505 <term><varname>ConditionFileIsExecutable=</varname></term>
1506
1507 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionFileIsExecutable=</varname> is similar to
1508 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname> but verifies that a certain path exists, is a regular file,
1509 and marked executable.</para>
1510 </listitem>
1511 </varlistentry>
1512
1513 <varlistentry>
1514 <term><varname>ConditionUser=</varname></term>
1515
1516 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionUser=</varname> takes a numeric <literal>UID</literal>, a UNIX
1517 user name, or the special value <literal>@system</literal>. This condition may be used to check
1518 whether the service manager is running as the given user. The special value
1519 <literal>@system</literal> can be used to check if the user id is within the system user
1520 range. This option is not useful for system services, as the system manager exclusively runs as the
1521 root user, and thus the test result is constant.</para>
1522 </listitem>
1523 </varlistentry>
1524
1525 <varlistentry>
1526 <term><varname>ConditionGroup=</varname></term>
1527
1528 <listitem><para><varname>ConditionGroup=</varname> is similar to <varname>ConditionUser=</varname>
1529 but verifies that the service manager's real or effective group, or any of its auxiliary groups,
1530 match the specified group or GID. This setting does not support the special value
1531 <literal>@system</literal>.</para>
1532 </listitem>
1533 </varlistentry>
1534
1535 <varlistentry>
1536 <term><varname>ConditionControlGroupController=</varname></term>
1537
1538 <listitem><para>Check whether given cgroup controllers (e.g. <literal>cpu</literal>) are available
1539 for use on the system or whether the legacy v1 cgroup or the modern v2 cgroup hierarchy is used.
1540 </para>
1541
1542 <para>Multiple controllers may be passed with a space separating them; in this case the condition
1543 will only pass if all listed controllers are available for use. Controllers unknown to systemd are
1544 ignored. Valid controllers are <literal>cpu</literal>, <literal>cpuacct</literal>,
1545 <literal>io</literal>, <literal>blkio</literal>, <literal>memory</literal>,
1546 <literal>devices</literal>, and <literal>pids</literal>. Even if available in the kernel, a
1547 particular controller may not be available if it was disabled on the kernel command line with
1548 <varname>cgroup_disable=controller</varname>.</para>
1549
1550 <para>Alternatively, two special strings <literal>v1</literal> and <literal>v2</literal> may be
1551 specified (without any controller names). <literal>v2</literal> will pass if the unified v2 cgroup
1552 hierarchy is used, and <literal>v1</literal> will pass if the legacy v1 hierarchy or the hybrid
1553 hierarchy are used (see the discussion of <varname>systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy</varname> and
1554 <varname>systemd.legacy_systemd_cgroup_controller</varname> in
1555 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1556 for more information).</para>
1557 </listitem>
1558 </varlistentry>
1559
1560 <varlistentry>
1561 <term><varname>ConditionMemory=</varname></term>
1562
1563 <listitem><para>Verify that the specified amount of system memory is available to the current
1564 system. Takes a memory size in bytes as argument, optionally prefixed with a comparison operator
1565 <literal>&lt;</literal>, <literal>&lt;=</literal>, <literal>=</literal>, <literal>!=</literal>,
1566 <literal>&gt;=</literal>, <literal>&gt;</literal>. On bare-metal systems compares the amount of
1567 physical memory in the system with the specified size, adhering to the specified comparison
1568 operator. In containers compares the amount of memory assigned to the container instead.</para>
1569 </listitem>
1570 </varlistentry>
1571
1572 <varlistentry>
1573 <term><varname>ConditionCPUs=</varname></term>
1574
1575 <listitem><para>Verify that the specified number of CPUs is available to the current system. Takes
1576 a number of CPUs as argument, optionally prefixed with a comparison operator
1577 <literal>&lt;</literal>, <literal>&lt;=</literal>, <literal>=</literal>, <literal>!=</literal>,
1578 <literal>&gt;=</literal>, <literal>&gt;</literal>. Compares the number of CPUs in the CPU affinity
1579 mask configured of the service manager itself with the specified number, adhering to the specified
1580 comparison operator. On physical systems the number of CPUs in the affinity mask of the service
1581 manager usually matches the number of physical CPUs, but in special and virtual environments might
1582 differ. In particular, in containers the affinity mask usually matches the number of CPUs assigned
1583 to the container and not the physically available ones.</para></listitem>
1584 </varlistentry>
1585
1586 <varlistentry>
1587 <term><varname>ConditionCPUFeature=</varname></term>
1588
1589 <listitem><para>Verify that a given CPU feature is available via the <literal>CPUID</literal>
1590 instruction. This condition only does something on i386 and x86-64 processors. On other
1591 processors it is assumed that the CPU does not support the given feature. It checks the leaves
1592 <literal>1</literal>, <literal>7</literal>, <literal>0x80000001</literal>, and
1593 <literal>0x80000007</literal>. Valid values are:
1594 <literal>fpu</literal>,
1595 <literal>vme</literal>,
1596 <literal>de</literal>,
1597 <literal>pse</literal>,
1598 <literal>tsc</literal>,
1599 <literal>msr</literal>,
1600 <literal>pae</literal>,
1601 <literal>mce</literal>,
1602 <literal>cx8</literal>,
1603 <literal>apic</literal>,
1604 <literal>sep</literal>,
1605 <literal>mtrr</literal>,
1606 <literal>pge</literal>,
1607 <literal>mca</literal>,
1608 <literal>cmov</literal>,
1609 <literal>pat</literal>,
1610 <literal>pse36</literal>,
1611 <literal>clflush</literal>,
1612 <literal>mmx</literal>,
1613 <literal>fxsr</literal>,
1614 <literal>sse</literal>,
1615 <literal>sse2</literal>,
1616 <literal>ht</literal>,
1617 <literal>pni</literal>,
1618 <literal>pclmul</literal>,
1619 <literal>monitor</literal>,
1620 <literal>ssse3</literal>,
1621 <literal>fma3</literal>,
1622 <literal>cx16</literal>,
1623 <literal>sse4_1</literal>,
1624 <literal>sse4_2</literal>,
1625 <literal>movbe</literal>,
1626 <literal>popcnt</literal>,
1627 <literal>aes</literal>,
1628 <literal>xsave</literal>,
1629 <literal>osxsave</literal>,
1630 <literal>avx</literal>,
1631 <literal>f16c</literal>,
1632 <literal>rdrand</literal>,
1633 <literal>bmi1</literal>,
1634 <literal>avx2</literal>,
1635 <literal>bmi2</literal>,
1636 <literal>rdseed</literal>,
1637 <literal>adx</literal>,
1638 <literal>sha_ni</literal>,
1639 <literal>syscall</literal>,
1640 <literal>rdtscp</literal>,
1641 <literal>lm</literal>,
1642 <literal>lahf_lm</literal>,
1643 <literal>abm</literal>,
1644 <literal>constant_tsc</literal>.</para>
1645 </listitem>
1646 </varlistentry>
1647
1648 <varlistentry>
1649 <term><varname>ConditionOSRelease=</varname></term>
1650
1651 <listitem><para>Verify that a specific <literal>key=value</literal> pair is set in the host's
1652 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>os-release</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
1653
1654 <para>Other than exact matching with <literal>=</literal>, and <literal>!=</literal>, relative
1655 comparisons are supported for versioned parameters (e.g. <literal>VERSION_ID</literal>). The
1656 comparator can be one of <literal>&lt;</literal>, <literal>&lt;=</literal>, <literal>=</literal>,
1657 <literal>!=</literal>, <literal>&gt;=</literal> and <literal>&gt;</literal>.</para>
1658 </listitem>
1659 </varlistentry>
1660
1661 <varlistentry>
1662 <term><varname>AssertArchitecture=</varname></term>
1663 <term><varname>AssertVirtualization=</varname></term>
1664 <term><varname>AssertHost=</varname></term>
1665 <term><varname>AssertKernelCommandLine=</varname></term>
1666 <term><varname>AssertKernelVersion=</varname></term>
1667 <term><varname>AssertEnvironment=</varname></term>
1668 <term><varname>AssertSecurity=</varname></term>
1669 <term><varname>AssertCapability=</varname></term>
1670 <term><varname>AssertACPower=</varname></term>
1671 <term><varname>AssertNeedsUpdate=</varname></term>
1672 <term><varname>AssertFirstBoot=</varname></term>
1673 <term><varname>AssertPathExists=</varname></term>
1674 <term><varname>AssertPathExistsGlob=</varname></term>
1675 <term><varname>AssertPathIsDirectory=</varname></term>
1676 <term><varname>AssertPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname></term>
1677 <term><varname>AssertPathIsMountPoint=</varname></term>
1678 <term><varname>AssertPathIsReadWrite=</varname></term>
1679 <term><varname>AssertPathIsEncrypted=</varname></term>
1680 <term><varname>AssertDirectoryNotEmpty=</varname></term>
1681 <term><varname>AssertFileNotEmpty=</varname></term>
1682 <term><varname>AssertFileIsExecutable=</varname></term>
1683 <term><varname>AssertUser=</varname></term>
1684 <term><varname>AssertGroup=</varname></term>
1685 <term><varname>AssertControlGroupController=</varname></term>
1686 <term><varname>AssertMemory=</varname></term>
1687 <term><varname>AssertCPUs=</varname></term>
1688 <term><varname>AssertOSRelease=</varname></term>
1689
1690 <listitem><para>Similar to the <varname>ConditionArchitecture=</varname>,
1691 <varname>ConditionVirtualization=</varname>, …, condition settings described above, these settings
1692 add assertion checks to the start-up of the unit. However, unlike the conditions settings, any
1693 assertion setting that is not met results in failure of the start job (which means this is logged
1694 loudly). Note that hitting a configured assertion does not cause the unit to enter the
1695 <literal>failed</literal> state (or in fact result in any state change of the unit), it affects
1696 only the job queued for it. Use assertion expressions for units that cannot operate when specific
1697 requirements are not met, and when this is something the administrator or user should look
1698 into.</para>
1699 </listitem>
1700 </varlistentry>
1701 </variablelist>
1702 </refsect2>
1703 </refsect1>
1704
1705 <refsect1>
1706 <title>Mapping of unit properties to their inverses</title>
1707
1708 <para>Unit settings that create a relationship with a second unit usually show up
1709 in properties of both units, for example in <command>systemctl show</command>
1710 output. In some cases the name of the property is the same as the name of the
1711 configuration setting, but not always. This table lists the properties
1712 that are shown on two units which are connected through some dependency, and shows
1713 which property on "source" unit corresponds to which property on the "target" unit.
1714 </para>
1715
1716 <table>
1717 <title>
1718 "Forward" and "reverse" unit properties
1719 </title>
1720
1721 <tgroup cols='4'>
1722 <colspec colname='forward' />
1723 <colspec colname='reverse' />
1724 <colspec colname='fuse' />
1725 <colspec colname='ruse' />
1726 <thead>
1727 <row>
1728 <entry>"Forward" property</entry>
1729 <entry>"Reverse" property</entry>
1730 <entry namest='fuse' nameend='ruse' valign='middle'>Where used</entry>
1731 </row>
1732 </thead>
1733 <tbody>
1734 <row>
1735 <entry><varname>Before=</varname></entry>
1736 <entry><varname>After=</varname></entry>
1737 <entry morerows='1' namest='fuse' nameend='ruse' valign='middle'>[Unit] section</entry>
1738 </row>
1739 <row>
1740 <entry><varname>After=</varname></entry>
1741 <entry><varname>Before=</varname></entry>
1742 </row>
1743 <row>
1744 <entry><varname>Requires=</varname></entry>
1745 <entry><varname>RequiredBy=</varname></entry>
1746 <entry>[Unit] section</entry>
1747 <entry>[Install] section</entry>
1748 </row>
1749 <row>
1750 <entry><varname>Wants=</varname></entry>
1751 <entry><varname>WantedBy=</varname></entry>
1752 <entry>[Unit] section</entry>
1753 <entry>[Install] section</entry>
1754 </row>
1755 <row>
1756 <entry><varname>PartOf=</varname></entry>
1757 <entry><varname>ConsistsOf=</varname></entry>
1758 <entry>[Unit] section</entry>
1759 <entry>an automatic property</entry>
1760 </row>
1761 <row>
1762 <entry><varname>BindsTo=</varname></entry>
1763 <entry><varname>BoundBy=</varname></entry>
1764 <entry>[Unit] section</entry>
1765 <entry>an automatic property</entry>
1766 </row>
1767 <row>
1768 <entry><varname>Requisite=</varname></entry>
1769 <entry><varname>RequisiteOf=</varname></entry>
1770 <entry>[Unit] section</entry>
1771 <entry>an automatic property</entry>
1772 </row>
1773 <row>
1774 <entry><varname>Triggers=</varname></entry>
1775 <entry><varname>TriggeredBy=</varname></entry>
1776 <entry namest='fuse' nameend='ruse' valign='middle'>Automatic properties, see notes below</entry>
1777 </row>
1778 <row>
1779 <entry><varname>Conflicts=</varname></entry>
1780 <entry><varname>ConflictedBy=</varname></entry>
1781 <entry>[Unit] section</entry>
1782 <entry>an automatic property</entry>
1783 </row>
1784 <row>
1785 <entry><varname>PropagatesReloadTo=</varname></entry>
1786 <entry><varname>ReloadPropagatedFrom=</varname></entry>
1787 <entry morerows='1' namest='fuse' nameend='ruse' valign='middle'>[Unit] section</entry>
1788 </row>
1789 <row>
1790 <entry><varname>ReloadPropagatedFrom=</varname></entry>
1791 <entry><varname>PropagatesReloadTo=</varname></entry>
1792 </row>
1793 <row>
1794 <entry><varname>Following=</varname></entry>
1795 <entry>n/a</entry>
1796 <entry>An automatic property</entry>
1797 </row>
1798 </tbody>
1799 </tgroup>
1800 </table>
1801
1802 <para>Note: <varname>WantedBy=</varname> and <varname>RequiredBy=</varname> are
1803 used in the [Install] section to create symlinks in <filename>.wants/</filename>
1804 and <filename>.requires/</filename> directories. They cannot be used directly as a
1805 unit configuration setting.</para>
1806
1807 <para>Note: <varname>ConsistsOf=</varname>, <varname>BoundBy=</varname>,
1808 <varname>RequisiteOf=</varname>, <varname>ConflictedBy=</varname> are created
1809 implicitly along with their reverses and cannot be specified directly.</para>
1810
1811 <para>Note: <varname>Triggers=</varname> is created implicitly between a socket,
1812 path unit, or an automount unit, and the unit they activate. By default a unit
1813 with the same name is triggered, but this can be overridden using
1814 <varname>Sockets=</varname>, <varname>Service=</varname>, and <varname>Unit=</varname>
1815 settings. See
1816 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1817 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1818 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.path</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1819 and
1820 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.automount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1821 for details. <varname>TriggeredBy=</varname> is created implicitly on the
1822 triggered unit.</para>
1823
1824 <para>Note: <varname>Following=</varname> is used to group device aliases and points to the
1825 "primary" device unit that systemd is using to track device state, usually corresponding to a
1826 sysfs path. It does not show up in the "target" unit.</para>
1827 </refsect1>
1828
1829 <refsect1>
1830 <title>[Install] Section Options</title>
1831
1832 <para>Unit files may include an [Install] section, which carries installation information for
1833 the unit. This section is not interpreted by
1834 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> during runtime; it is
1835 used by the <command>enable</command> and <command>disable</command> commands of the
1836 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> tool during
1837 installation of a unit.</para>
1838
1839 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
1840 <varlistentry>
1841 <term><varname>Alias=</varname></term>
1842
1843 <listitem><para>A space-separated list of additional names this unit shall be installed under. The names listed
1844 here must have the same suffix (i.e. type) as the unit filename. This option may be specified more than once,
1845 in which case all listed names are used. At installation time, <command>systemctl enable</command> will create
1846 symlinks from these names to the unit filename. Note that not all unit types support such alias names, and this
1847 setting is not supported for them. Specifically, mount, slice, swap, and automount units do not support
1848 aliasing.</para></listitem>
1849 </varlistentry>
1850
1851 <varlistentry>
1852 <term><varname>WantedBy=</varname></term>
1853 <term><varname>RequiredBy=</varname></term>
1854
1855 <listitem><para>This option may be used more than once, or a
1856 space-separated list of unit names may be given. A symbolic
1857 link is created in the <filename>.wants/</filename> or
1858 <filename>.requires/</filename> directory of each of the
1859 listed units when this unit is installed by <command>systemctl
1860 enable</command>. This has the effect that a dependency of
1861 type <varname>Wants=</varname> or <varname>Requires=</varname>
1862 is added from the listed unit to the current unit. The primary
1863 result is that the current unit will be started when the
1864 listed unit is started. See the description of
1865 <varname>Wants=</varname> and <varname>Requires=</varname> in
1866 the [Unit] section for details.</para>
1867
1868 <para><command>WantedBy=foo.service</command> in a service
1869 <filename>bar.service</filename> is mostly equivalent to
1870 <command>Alias=foo.service.wants/bar.service</command> in the
1871 same file. In case of template units, <command>systemctl
1872 enable</command> must be called with an instance name, and
1873 this instance will be added to the
1874 <filename>.wants/</filename> or
1875 <filename>.requires/</filename> list of the listed unit. E.g.
1876 <command>WantedBy=getty.target</command> in a service
1877 <filename>getty@.service</filename> will result in
1878 <command>systemctl enable getty@tty2.service</command>
1879 creating a
1880 <filename>getty.target.wants/getty@tty2.service</filename>
1881 link to <filename>getty@.service</filename>.
1882 </para></listitem>
1883 </varlistentry>
1884
1885 <varlistentry>
1886 <term><varname>Also=</varname></term>
1887
1888 <listitem><para>Additional units to install/deinstall when
1889 this unit is installed/deinstalled. If the user requests
1890 installation/deinstallation of a unit with this option
1891 configured, <command>systemctl enable</command> and
1892 <command>systemctl disable</command> will automatically
1893 install/uninstall units listed in this option as well.</para>
1894
1895 <para>This option may be used more than once, or a
1896 space-separated list of unit names may be
1897 given.</para></listitem>
1898 </varlistentry>
1899
1900 <varlistentry>
1901 <term><varname>DefaultInstance=</varname></term>
1902
1903 <listitem><para>In template unit files, this specifies for
1904 which instance the unit shall be enabled if the template is
1905 enabled without any explicitly set instance. This option has
1906 no effect in non-template unit files. The specified string
1907 must be usable as instance identifier.</para></listitem>
1908 </varlistentry>
1909 </variablelist>
1910
1911 <para>The following specifiers are interpreted in the Install section:
1912 %a, %b, %B, %g, %G, %H, %i, %j, %l, %m, %n, %N, %o, %p, %u, %U, %v, %w, %W, %%.
1913 For their meaning see the next section.</para>
1914 </refsect1>
1915
1916 <refsect1>
1917 <title>Specifiers</title>
1918
1919 <para>Many settings resolve specifiers which may be used to write
1920 generic unit files referring to runtime or unit parameters that
1921 are replaced when the unit files are loaded. Specifiers must be known
1922 and resolvable for the setting to be valid. The following
1923 specifiers are understood:</para>
1924
1925 <table class='specifiers'>
1926 <title>Specifiers available in unit files</title>
1927 <tgroup cols='3' align='left' colsep='1' rowsep='1'>
1928 <colspec colname="spec" />
1929 <colspec colname="mean" />
1930 <colspec colname="detail" />
1931 <thead>
1932 <row>
1933 <entry>Specifier</entry>
1934 <entry>Meaning</entry>
1935 <entry>Details</entry>
1936 </row>
1937 </thead>
1938 <tbody>
1939 <row>
1940 <!-- We do not use the common definition from standard-specifiers.xml here since it includes a
1941 reference onto our own man page, which would make the rendered version self-referential. -->
1942 <entry><literal>%a</literal></entry>
1943 <entry>Architecture</entry>
1944 <entry>A short string identifying the architecture of the local system. A string such as <constant>x86</constant>, <constant>x86-64</constant> or <constant>arm64</constant>. See the architectures defined for <varname>ConditionArchitecture=</varname> above for a full list.</entry>
1945 </row>
1946 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="A"/>
1947 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="b"/>
1948 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="B"/>
1949 <row>
1950 <entry><literal>%C</literal></entry>
1951 <entry>Cache directory root</entry>
1952 <entry>This is either <filename>/var/cache</filename> (for the system manager) or the path <literal>$XDG_CACHE_HOME</literal> resolves to (for user managers).</entry>
1953 </row>
1954 <row>
1955 <entry><literal>%E</literal></entry>
1956 <entry>Configuration directory root</entry>
1957 <entry>This is either <filename>/etc/</filename> (for the system manager) or the path <literal>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</literal> resolves to (for user managers).</entry>
1958 </row>
1959 <row>
1960 <entry><literal>%f</literal></entry>
1961 <entry>Unescaped filename</entry>
1962 <entry>This is either the unescaped instance name (if applicable) with <filename>/</filename> prepended (if applicable), or the unescaped prefix name prepended with <filename>/</filename>. This implements unescaping according to the rules for escaping absolute file system paths discussed above.</entry>
1963 </row>
1964 <row>
1965 <entry><literal>%g</literal></entry>
1966 <entry>User group</entry>
1967 <entry>This is the name of the group running the service manager instance. In case of the system manager this resolves to <literal>root</literal>.</entry>
1968 </row>
1969 <row>
1970 <entry><literal>%G</literal></entry>
1971 <entry>User GID</entry>
1972 <entry>This is the numeric GID of the user running the service manager instance. In case of the system manager this resolves to <literal>0</literal>.</entry>
1973 </row>
1974 <row>
1975 <entry><literal>%h</literal></entry>
1976 <entry>User home directory</entry>
1977 <entry>This is the home directory of the <emphasis>user running the service manager instance</emphasis>. In case of the system manager this resolves to <literal>/root</literal>.
1978
1979 Note that this setting is <emphasis>not</emphasis> influenced by the <varname>User=</varname> setting configurable in the [Service] section of the service unit.</entry>
1980 </row>
1981 <row>
1982 <!-- We do not use the common definition from standard-specifiers.xml here since we want a
1983 slightly more verbose explanation here, referring to the reload cycle. -->
1984 <entry><literal>%H</literal></entry>
1985 <entry>Host name</entry>
1986 <entry>The hostname of the running system at the point in time the unit configuration is loaded.</entry>
1987 </row>
1988 <row>
1989 <entry><literal>%i</literal></entry>
1990 <entry>Instance name</entry>
1991 <entry>For instantiated units this is the string between the first <literal>@</literal> character and the type suffix. Empty for non-instantiated units.</entry>
1992 </row>
1993 <row>
1994 <entry><literal>%I</literal></entry>
1995 <entry>Unescaped instance name</entry>
1996 <entry>Same as <literal>%i</literal>, but with escaping undone.</entry>
1997 </row>
1998 <row>
1999 <entry><literal>%j</literal></entry>
2000 <entry>Final component of the prefix</entry>
2001 <entry>This is the string between the last <literal>-</literal> and the end of the prefix name. If there is no <literal>-</literal>, this is the same as <literal>%p</literal>.</entry>
2002 </row>
2003 <row>
2004 <entry><literal>%J</literal></entry>
2005 <entry>Unescaped final component of the prefix</entry>
2006 <entry>Same as <literal>%j</literal>, but with escaping undone.</entry>
2007 </row>
2008 <row>
2009 <entry><literal>%l</literal></entry>
2010 <entry>Short host name</entry>
2011 <entry>The hostname of the running system at the point in time the unit configuration is loaded, truncated at the first dot to remove any domain component.</entry>
2012 </row>
2013 <row>
2014 <entry><literal>%L</literal></entry>
2015 <entry>Log directory root</entry>
2016 <entry>This is either <filename>/var/log</filename> (for the system manager) or the path <literal>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</literal> resolves to with <filename index="false">/log</filename> appended (for user managers).</entry>
2017 </row>
2018 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="m"/>
2019 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="M"/>
2020 <row>
2021 <entry><literal>%n</literal></entry>
2022 <entry>Full unit name</entry>
2023 <entry></entry>
2024 </row>
2025 <row>
2026 <entry><literal>%N</literal></entry>
2027 <entry>Full unit name</entry>
2028 <entry>Same as <literal>%n</literal>, but with the type suffix removed.</entry>
2029 </row>
2030 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="o"/>
2031 <row>
2032 <entry><literal>%p</literal></entry>
2033 <entry>Prefix name</entry>
2034 <entry>For instantiated units, this refers to the string before the first <literal>@</literal> character of the unit name. For non-instantiated units, same as <literal>%N</literal>.</entry>
2035 </row>
2036 <row>
2037 <entry><literal>%P</literal></entry>
2038 <entry>Unescaped prefix name</entry>
2039 <entry>Same as <literal>%p</literal>, but with escaping undone.</entry>
2040 </row>
2041 <row>
2042 <entry><literal>%s</literal></entry>
2043 <entry>User shell</entry>
2044 <entry>This is the shell of the user running the service manager instance. In case of the system manager this resolves to <literal>/bin/sh</literal>.</entry>
2045 </row>
2046 <row>
2047 <entry><literal>%S</literal></entry>
2048 <entry>State directory root</entry>
2049 <entry>This is either <filename>/var/lib</filename> (for the system manager) or the path <literal>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</literal> resolves to (for user managers).</entry>
2050 </row>
2051 <row>
2052 <entry><literal>%t</literal></entry>
2053 <entry>Runtime directory root</entry>
2054 <entry>This is either <filename>/run/</filename> (for the system manager) or the path <literal>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR</literal> resolves to (for user managers).</entry>
2055 </row>
2056 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="T"/>
2057 <row>
2058 <entry><literal>%u</literal></entry>
2059 <entry>User name</entry>
2060 <entry>This is the name of the <emphasis>user running the service manager instance</emphasis>. In case of the system manager this resolves to <literal>root</literal>.
2061
2062 Note that this setting is <emphasis>not</emphasis> influenced by the <varname>User=</varname> setting configurable in the [Service] section of the service unit.</entry>
2063 </row>
2064 <row>
2065 <entry><literal>%U</literal></entry>
2066 <entry>User UID</entry>
2067 <entry>This is the numeric UID of the <emphasis>user running the service manager instance</emphasis>. In case of the system manager this resolves to <literal>0</literal>.
2068
2069 Note that this setting is <emphasis>not</emphasis> influenced by the <varname>User=</varname> setting configurable in the [Service] section of the service unit.</entry>
2070 </row>
2071 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="v"/>
2072 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="V"/>
2073 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="w"/>
2074 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="W"/>
2075 <xi:include href="standard-specifiers.xml" xpointer="percent"/>
2076 </tbody>
2077 </tgroup>
2078 </table>
2079 </refsect1>
2080
2081 <refsect1>
2082 <title>Examples</title>
2083
2084 <example>
2085 <title>Allowing units to be enabled</title>
2086
2087 <para>The following snippet (highlighted) allows a unit (e.g.
2088 <filename>foo.service</filename>) to be enabled via
2089 <command>systemctl enable</command>:</para>
2090
2091 <programlisting>[Unit]
2092 Description=Foo
2093
2094 [Service]
2095 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/foo-daemon
2096
2097 <emphasis>[Install]</emphasis>
2098 <emphasis>WantedBy=multi-user.target</emphasis></programlisting>
2099
2100 <para>After running <command>systemctl enable</command>, a
2101 symlink
2102 <filename index="false">/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/foo.service</filename>
2103 linking to the actual unit will be created. It tells systemd to
2104 pull in the unit when starting
2105 <filename>multi-user.target</filename>. The inverse
2106 <command>systemctl disable</command> will remove that symlink
2107 again.</para>
2108 </example>
2109
2110 <example>
2111 <title>Overriding vendor settings</title>
2112
2113 <para>There are two methods of overriding vendor settings in
2114 unit files: copying the unit file from
2115 <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/system</filename> to
2116 <filename>/etc/systemd/system</filename> and modifying the
2117 chosen settings. Alternatively, one can create a directory named
2118 <filename><replaceable>unit</replaceable>.d/</filename> within
2119 <filename>/etc/systemd/system</filename> and place a drop-in
2120 file <filename><replaceable>name</replaceable>.conf</filename>
2121 there that only changes the specific settings one is interested
2122 in. Note that multiple such drop-in files are read if
2123 present, processed in lexicographic order of their filename.</para>
2124
2125 <para>The advantage of the first method is that one easily
2126 overrides the complete unit, the vendor unit is not parsed at
2127 all anymore. It has the disadvantage that improvements to the
2128 unit file by the vendor are not automatically incorporated on
2129 updates.</para>
2130
2131 <para>The advantage of the second method is that one only
2132 overrides the settings one specifically wants, where updates to
2133 the unit by the vendor automatically apply. This has the
2134 disadvantage that some future updates by the vendor might be
2135 incompatible with the local changes.</para>
2136
2137 <para>This also applies for user instances of systemd, but with
2138 different locations for the unit files. See the section on unit
2139 load paths for further details.</para>
2140
2141 <para>Suppose there is a vendor-supplied unit
2142 <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/system/httpd.service</filename> with
2143 the following contents:</para>
2144
2145 <programlisting>[Unit]
2146 Description=Some HTTP server
2147 After=remote-fs.target sqldb.service
2148 Requires=sqldb.service
2149 AssertPathExists=/srv/webserver
2150
2151 [Service]
2152 Type=notify
2153 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/some-fancy-httpd-server
2154 Nice=5
2155
2156 [Install]
2157 WantedBy=multi-user.target</programlisting>
2158
2159 <para>Now one wants to change some settings as an administrator:
2160 firstly, in the local setup, <filename>/srv/webserver</filename>
2161 might not exist, because the HTTP server is configured to use
2162 <filename>/srv/www</filename> instead. Secondly, the local
2163 configuration makes the HTTP server also depend on a memory
2164 cache service, <filename>memcached.service</filename>, that
2165 should be pulled in (<varname>Requires=</varname>) and also be
2166 ordered appropriately (<varname>After=</varname>). Thirdly, in
2167 order to harden the service a bit more, the administrator would
2168 like to set the <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname> setting (see
2169 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.exec</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
2170 for details). And lastly, the administrator would like to reset
2171 the niceness of the service to its default value of 0.</para>
2172
2173 <para>The first possibility is to copy the unit file to
2174 <filename>/etc/systemd/system/httpd.service</filename> and
2175 change the chosen settings:</para>
2176
2177 <programlisting>[Unit]
2178 Description=Some HTTP server
2179 After=remote-fs.target sqldb.service <emphasis>memcached.service</emphasis>
2180 Requires=sqldb.service <emphasis>memcached.service</emphasis>
2181 AssertPathExists=<emphasis>/srv/www</emphasis>
2182
2183 [Service]
2184 Type=notify
2185 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/some-fancy-httpd-server
2186 <emphasis>Nice=0</emphasis>
2187 <emphasis>PrivateTmp=yes</emphasis>
2188
2189 [Install]
2190 WantedBy=multi-user.target</programlisting>
2191
2192 <para>Alternatively, the administrator could create a drop-in
2193 file
2194 <filename>/etc/systemd/system/httpd.service.d/local.conf</filename>
2195 with the following contents:</para>
2196
2197 <programlisting>[Unit]
2198 After=memcached.service
2199 Requires=memcached.service
2200 # Reset all assertions and then re-add the condition we want
2201 AssertPathExists=
2202 AssertPathExists=/srv/www
2203
2204 [Service]
2205 Nice=0
2206 PrivateTmp=yes</programlisting>
2207
2208 <para>Note that for drop-in files, if one wants to remove
2209 entries from a setting that is parsed as a list (and is not a
2210 dependency), such as <varname>AssertPathExists=</varname> (or
2211 e.g. <varname>ExecStart=</varname> in service units), one needs
2212 to first clear the list before re-adding all entries except the
2213 one that is to be removed. Dependencies (<varname>After=</varname>, etc.)
2214 cannot be reset to an empty list, so dependencies can only be
2215 added in drop-ins. If you want to remove dependencies, you have
2216 to override the entire unit.</para>
2217
2218 </example>
2219
2220 <example>
2221 <title>Top level drop-ins with template units</title>
2222
2223 <para>Top level per-type drop-ins can be used to change some aspect of
2224 all units of a particular type. For example by creating the
2225 <filename index='false'>/etc/systemd/system/service.d/</filename>
2226 directory with a drop-in file, the contents of the drop-in file can be
2227 applied to all service units. We can take this further by having the
2228 top-level drop-in instantiate a secondary helper unit. Consider for
2229 example the following set of units and drop-in files where we install
2230 an <varname>OnFailure=</varname> dependency for all service units.</para>
2231
2232 <para>
2233 <filename index='false'>/etc/systemd/system/failure-handler@.service</filename>:</para>
2234
2235 <programlisting>[Unit]
2236 Description=My failure handler for %i
2237
2238 [Service]
2239 Type=oneshot
2240 # Perform some special action for when %i exits unexpectedly.
2241 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/myfailurehandler %i
2242 </programlisting>
2243
2244 <para>We can then add an instance of
2245 <filename index='false'>failure-handler@.service</filename> as an
2246 <varname>OnFailure=</varname> dependency for all service units.</para>
2247
2248 <para>
2249 <filename index='false'>/etc/systemd/system/service.d/10-all.conf</filename>:</para>
2250
2251 <programlisting>[Unit]
2252 OnFailure=failure-handler@%N.service
2253 </programlisting>
2254
2255 <para>Now, after running <command>systemctl daemon-reload</command> all
2256 services will have acquired an <varname>OnFailure=</varname> dependency on
2257 <filename index='false'>failure-handler@%N.service</filename>. The
2258 template instance units will also have gained the dependency which results
2259 in the creation of a recursive dependency chain. systemd will try to detect
2260 these recursive dependency chains where a template unit directly and
2261 recursively depends on itself and will remove such dependencies
2262 automatically if it finds them. If systemd doesn't detect the recursive
2263 dependency chain, we can break the chain ourselves by disabling the drop-in
2264 for the template instance units via a symlink to
2265 <filename index='false'>/dev/null</filename>:</para>
2266
2267 <programlisting>
2268 <command>mkdir /etc/systemd/system/failure-handler@.service.d/</command>
2269 <command>ln -s /dev/null /etc/systemd/system/failure-handler@.service.d/10-all.conf</command>
2270 <command>systemctl daemon-reload</command>
2271 </programlisting>
2272
2273 <para>This ensures that if a <filename index='false'>failure-handler@.service</filename> instance fails it will not trigger an instance named
2274 <filename index='false'>failure-handler@failure-handler.service</filename>.</para>
2275
2276 </example>
2277
2278 </refsect1>
2279
2280 <refsect1>
2281 <title>See Also</title>
2282 <para>
2283 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2284 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2285 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2286 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.special</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2287 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2288 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2289 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.device</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2290 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2291 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.automount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2292 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.swap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2293 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.target</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2294 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.path</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2295 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.timer</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2296 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.scope</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2297 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.slice</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2298 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2299 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-analyze</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2300 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2301 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.directives</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2302 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>uname</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
2303 </para>
2304 </refsect1>
2305
2306 </refentry>