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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 <!-- SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+ -->
5
6 <refentry id="systemd.exec" xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
7 <refentryinfo>
8 <title>systemd.exec</title>
9 <productname>systemd</productname>
10 </refentryinfo>
11
12 <refmeta>
13 <refentrytitle>systemd.exec</refentrytitle>
14 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
15 </refmeta>
16
17 <refnamediv>
18 <refname>systemd.exec</refname>
19 <refpurpose>Execution environment configuration</refpurpose>
20 </refnamediv>
21
22 <refsynopsisdiv>
23 <para><filename><replaceable>service</replaceable>.service</filename>,
24 <filename><replaceable>socket</replaceable>.socket</filename>,
25 <filename><replaceable>mount</replaceable>.mount</filename>,
26 <filename><replaceable>swap</replaceable>.swap</filename></para>
27 </refsynopsisdiv>
28
29 <refsect1>
30 <title>Description</title>
31
32 <para>Unit configuration files for services, sockets, mount points, and swap devices share a subset of
33 configuration options which define the execution environment of spawned processes.</para>
34
35 <para>This man page lists the configuration options shared by these four unit types. See
36 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for the common
37 options of all unit configuration files, and
38 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
39 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
40 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.swap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and
41 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for more
42 information on the specific unit configuration files. The execution specific configuration options are configured
43 in the [Service], [Socket], [Mount], or [Swap] sections, depending on the unit type.</para>
44
45 <para>In addition, options which control resources through Linux Control Groups (cgroups) are listed in
46 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
47 Those options complement options listed here.</para>
48 </refsect1>
49
50 <refsect1>
51 <title>Implicit Dependencies</title>
52
53 <para>A few execution parameters result in additional, automatic dependencies to be added:</para>
54
55 <itemizedlist>
56 <listitem><para>Units with <varname>WorkingDirectory=</varname>, <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>,
57 <varname>RootImage=</varname>, <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname>, <varname>StateDirectory=</varname>,
58 <varname>CacheDirectory=</varname>, <varname>LogsDirectory=</varname> or
59 <varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname> set automatically gain dependencies of type
60 <varname>Requires=</varname> and <varname>After=</varname> on all mount units required to access the specified
61 paths. This is equivalent to having them listed explicitly in
62 <varname>RequiresMountsFor=</varname>.</para></listitem>
63
64 <listitem><para>Similar, units with <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname> enabled automatically get mount unit
65 dependencies for all mounts required to access <filename>/tmp</filename> and <filename>/var/tmp</filename>. They
66 will also gain an automatic <varname>After=</varname> dependency on
67 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para></listitem>
68
69 <listitem><para>Units whose standard output or error output is connected to <option>journal</option>,
70 <option>syslog</option> or <option>kmsg</option> (or their combinations with console output, see below)
71 automatically acquire dependencies of type <varname>After=</varname> on
72 <filename>systemd-journald.socket</filename>.</para></listitem>
73 </itemizedlist>
74 </refsect1>
75
76 <!-- We don't have any default dependency here. -->
77
78 <refsect1>
79 <title>Paths</title>
80
81 <para>The following settings may be used to change a service's view of the filesystem. Please note that the paths
82 must be absolute and must not contain a <literal>..</literal> path component.</para>
83
84 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
85
86 <varlistentry>
87 <term><varname>WorkingDirectory=</varname></term>
88
89 <listitem><para>Takes a directory path relative to the service's root directory specified by
90 <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>, or the special value <literal>~</literal>. Sets the working directory for
91 executed processes. If set to <literal>~</literal>, the home directory of the user specified in
92 <varname>User=</varname> is used. If not set, defaults to the root directory when systemd is running as a
93 system instance and the respective user's home directory if run as user. If the setting is prefixed with the
94 <literal>-</literal> character, a missing working directory is not considered fatal. If
95 <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname> is not set, then
96 <varname>WorkingDirectory=</varname> is relative to the root of the system running the service manager. Note
97 that setting this parameter might result in additional dependencies to be added to the unit (see
98 above).</para></listitem>
99 </varlistentry>
100
101 <varlistentry>
102 <term><varname>RootDirectory=</varname></term>
103
104 <listitem><para>Takes a directory path relative to the host's root directory (i.e. the root of the system
105 running the service manager). Sets the root directory for executed processes, with the <citerefentry
106 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>chroot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system
107 call. If this is used, it must be ensured that the process binary and all its auxiliary files are available in
108 the <function>chroot()</function> jail. Note that setting this parameter might result in additional
109 dependencies to be added to the unit (see above).</para>
110
111 <para>The <varname>MountAPIVFS=</varname> and <varname>PrivateUsers=</varname> settings are particularly useful
112 in conjunction with <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>. For details, see below.</para>
113
114 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
115 </varlistentry>
116
117 <varlistentry>
118 <term><varname>RootImage=</varname></term>
119
120 <listitem><para>Takes a path to a block device node or regular file as argument. This call is similar to
121 <varname>RootDirectory=</varname> however mounts a file system hierarchy from a block device node or loopback
122 file instead of a directory. The device node or file system image file needs to contain a file system without a
123 partition table, or a file system within an MBR/MS-DOS or GPT partition table with only a single
124 Linux-compatible partition, or a set of file systems within a GPT partition table that follows the <ulink
125 url="https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/DiscoverablePartitionsSpec/">Discoverable Partitions
126 Specification</ulink>.</para>
127
128 <para>When <varname>DevicePolicy=</varname> is set to <literal>closed</literal> or
129 <literal>strict</literal>, or set to <literal>auto</literal> and <varname>DeviceAllow=</varname> is
130 set, then this setting adds <filename>/dev/loop-control</filename> with <constant>rw</constant> mode,
131 <literal>block-loop</literal> and <literal>block-blkext</literal> with <constant>rwm</constant> mode
132 to <varname>DeviceAllow=</varname>. See
133 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
134 for the details about <varname>DevicePolicy=</varname> or <varname>DeviceAllow=</varname>. Also, see
135 <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname> below, as it may change the setting of
136 <varname>DevicePolicy=</varname>.</para>
137
138 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
139 </varlistentry>
140
141 <varlistentry>
142 <term><varname>MountAPIVFS=</varname></term>
143
144 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If on, a private mount namespace for the unit's processes is created
145 and the API file systems <filename>/proc</filename>, <filename>/sys</filename>, and <filename>/dev</filename>
146 are mounted inside of it, unless they are already mounted. Note that this option has no effect unless used in
147 conjunction with <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname> as these three mounts are
148 generally mounted in the host anyway, and unless the root directory is changed, the private mount namespace
149 will be a 1:1 copy of the host's, and include these three mounts. Note that the <filename>/dev</filename> file
150 system of the host is bind mounted if this option is used without <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname>. To run
151 the service with a private, minimal version of <filename>/dev/</filename>, combine this option with
152 <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname>.</para>
153
154 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
155 </varlistentry>
156
157 <varlistentry>
158 <term><varname>BindPaths=</varname></term>
159 <term><varname>BindReadOnlyPaths=</varname></term>
160
161 <listitem><para>Configures unit-specific bind mounts. A bind mount makes a particular file or directory
162 available at an additional place in the unit's view of the file system. Any bind mounts created with this
163 option are specific to the unit, and are not visible in the host's mount table. This option expects a
164 whitespace separated list of bind mount definitions. Each definition consists of a colon-separated triple of
165 source path, destination path and option string, where the latter two are optional. If only a source path is
166 specified the source and destination is taken to be the same. The option string may be either
167 <literal>rbind</literal> or <literal>norbind</literal> for configuring a recursive or non-recursive bind
168 mount. If the destination path is omitted, the option string must be omitted too.
169 Each bind mount definition may be prefixed with <literal>-</literal>, in which case it will be ignored
170 when its source path does not exist.</para>
171
172 <para><varname>BindPaths=</varname> creates regular writable bind mounts (unless the source file system mount
173 is already marked read-only), while <varname>BindReadOnlyPaths=</varname> creates read-only bind mounts. These
174 settings may be used more than once, each usage appends to the unit's list of bind mounts. If the empty string
175 is assigned to either of these two options the entire list of bind mounts defined prior to this is reset. Note
176 that in this case both read-only and regular bind mounts are reset, regardless which of the two settings is
177 used.</para>
178
179 <para>This option is particularly useful when <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname>
180 is used. In this case the source path refers to a path on the host file system, while the destination path
181 refers to a path below the root directory of the unit.</para>
182
183 <para>Note that the destination directory must exist or systemd must be able to create it. Thus, it
184 is not possible to use those options for mount points nested underneath paths specified in
185 <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname>, or under <filename>/home/</filename> and other protected
186 directories if <varname>ProtectHome=yes</varname> is
187 specified. <varname>TemporaryFileSystem=</varname> with <literal>:ro</literal> or
188 <varname>ProtectHome=tmpfs</varname> should be used instead.</para>
189
190 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
191 </varlistentry>
192
193 </variablelist>
194 </refsect1>
195
196 <refsect1>
197 <title>Credentials</title>
198
199 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="plural"/>
200
201 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
202
203 <varlistentry>
204 <term><varname>User=</varname></term>
205 <term><varname>Group=</varname></term>
206
207 <listitem><para>Set the UNIX user or group that the processes are executed as, respectively. Takes a single
208 user or group name, or a numeric ID as argument. For system services (services run by the system service
209 manager, i.e. managed by PID 1) and for user services of the root user (services managed by root's instance of
210 <command>systemd --user</command>), the default is <literal>root</literal>, but <varname>User=</varname> may be
211 used to specify a different user. For user services of any other user, switching user identity is not
212 permitted, hence the only valid setting is the same user the user's service manager is running as. If no group
213 is set, the default group of the user is used. This setting does not affect commands whose command line is
214 prefixed with <literal>+</literal>.</para>
215
216 <para>Note that restrictions on the user/group name syntax are enforced: the specified name must consist only
217 of the characters a-z, A-Z, 0-9, <literal>_</literal> and <literal>-</literal>, except for the first character
218 which must be one of a-z, A-Z or <literal>_</literal> (i.e. numbers and <literal>-</literal> are not permitted
219 as first character). The user/group name must have at least one character, and at most 31. These restrictions
220 are enforced in order to avoid ambiguities and to ensure user/group names and unit files remain portable among
221 Linux systems.</para>
222
223 <para>When used in conjunction with <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> the user/group name specified is
224 dynamically allocated at the time the service is started, and released at the time the service is stopped —
225 unless it is already allocated statically (see below). If <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is not used the
226 specified user and group must have been created statically in the user database no later than the moment the
227 service is started, for example using the
228 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sysusers.d</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> facility, which
229 is applied at boot or package install time.</para>
230
231 <para>If the <varname>User=</varname> setting is used the supplementary group list is initialized
232 from the specified user's default group list, as defined in the system's user and group
233 database. Additional groups may be configured through the <varname>SupplementaryGroups=</varname>
234 setting (see below).</para></listitem>
235 </varlistentry>
236
237 <varlistentry>
238 <term><varname>DynamicUser=</varname></term>
239
240 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean parameter. If set, a UNIX user and group pair is allocated
241 dynamically when the unit is started, and released as soon as it is stopped. The user and group will
242 not be added to <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> or <filename>/etc/group</filename>, but are managed
243 transiently during runtime. The
244 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>nss-systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> glibc
245 NSS module provides integration of these dynamic users/groups into the system's user and group
246 databases. The user and group name to use may be configured via <varname>User=</varname> and
247 <varname>Group=</varname> (see above). If these options are not used and dynamic user/group
248 allocation is enabled for a unit, the name of the dynamic user/group is implicitly derived from the
249 unit name. If the unit name without the type suffix qualifies as valid user name it is used directly,
250 otherwise a name incorporating a hash of it is used. If a statically allocated user or group of the
251 configured name already exists, it is used and no dynamic user/group is allocated. Note that if
252 <varname>User=</varname> is specified and the static group with the name exists, then it is required
253 that the static user with the name already exists. Similarly, if <varname>Group=</varname> is
254 specified and the static user with the name exists, then it is required that the static group with
255 the name already exists. Dynamic users/groups are allocated from the UID/GID range 61184…65519. It is
256 recommended to avoid this range for regular system or login users. At any point in time each UID/GID
257 from this range is only assigned to zero or one dynamically allocated users/groups in use. However,
258 UID/GIDs are recycled after a unit is terminated. Care should be taken that any processes running as
259 part of a unit for which dynamic users/groups are enabled do not leave files or directories owned by
260 these users/groups around, as a different unit might get the same UID/GID assigned later on, and thus
261 gain access to these files or directories. If <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is enabled,
262 <varname>RemoveIPC=</varname> and <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname> are implied (and cannot be turned
263 off). This ensures that the lifetime of IPC objects and temporary files created by the executed
264 processes is bound to the runtime of the service, and hence the lifetime of the dynamic
265 user/group. Since <filename>/tmp/</filename> and <filename>/var/tmp/</filename> are usually the only
266 world-writable directories on a system this ensures that a unit making use of dynamic user/group
267 allocation cannot leave files around after unit termination. Furthermore
268 <varname>NoNewPrivileges=</varname> and <varname>RestrictSUIDSGID=</varname> are implicitly enabled
269 (and cannot be disabled), to ensure that processes invoked cannot take benefit or create SUID/SGID
270 files or directories. Moreover <varname>ProtectSystem=strict</varname> and
271 <varname>ProtectHome=read-only</varname> are implied, thus prohibiting the service to write to
272 arbitrary file system locations. In order to allow the service to write to certain directories, they
273 have to be whitelisted using <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname>, but care must be taken so that
274 UID/GID recycling doesn't create security issues involving files created by the service. Use
275 <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname> (see below) in order to assign a writable runtime directory to a
276 service, owned by the dynamic user/group and removed automatically when the unit is terminated. Use
277 <varname>StateDirectory=</varname>, <varname>CacheDirectory=</varname> and
278 <varname>LogsDirectory=</varname> in order to assign a set of writable directories for specific
279 purposes to the service in a way that they are protected from vulnerabilities due to UID reuse (see
280 below). If this option is enabled, care should be taken that the unit's processes do not get access
281 to directories outside of these explicitly configured and managed ones. Specifically, do not use
282 <varname>BindPaths=</varname> and be careful with <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> file descriptor
283 passing for directory file descriptors, as this would permit processes to create files or directories
284 owned by the dynamic user/group that are not subject to the lifecycle and access guarantees of the
285 service. Defaults to off.</para></listitem>
286 </varlistentry>
287
288 <varlistentry>
289 <term><varname>SupplementaryGroups=</varname></term>
290
291 <listitem><para>Sets the supplementary Unix groups the processes are executed as. This takes a space-separated
292 list of group names or IDs. This option may be specified more than once, in which case all listed groups are
293 set as supplementary groups. When the empty string is assigned, the list of supplementary groups is reset, and
294 all assignments prior to this one will have no effect. In any way, this option does not override, but extends
295 the list of supplementary groups configured in the system group database for the user. This does not affect
296 commands prefixed with <literal>+</literal>.</para></listitem>
297 </varlistentry>
298
299 <varlistentry>
300 <term><varname>PAMName=</varname></term>
301
302 <listitem><para>Sets the PAM service name to set up a session as. If set, the executed process will be
303 registered as a PAM session under the specified service name. This is only useful in conjunction with the
304 <varname>User=</varname> setting, and is otherwise ignored. If not set, no PAM session will be opened for the
305 executed processes. See <citerefentry
306 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>pam</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
307 details.</para>
308
309 <para>Note that for each unit making use of this option a PAM session handler process will be maintained as
310 part of the unit and stays around as long as the unit is active, to ensure that appropriate actions can be
311 taken when the unit and hence the PAM session terminates. This process is named <literal>(sd-pam)</literal> and
312 is an immediate child process of the unit's main process.</para>
313
314 <para>Note that when this option is used for a unit it is very likely (depending on PAM configuration) that the
315 main unit process will be migrated to its own session scope unit when it is activated. This process will hence
316 be associated with two units: the unit it was originally started from (and for which
317 <varname>PAMName=</varname> was configured), and the session scope unit. Any child processes of that process
318 will however be associated with the session scope unit only. This has implications when used in combination
319 with <varname>NotifyAccess=</varname><option>all</option>, as these child processes will not be able to affect
320 changes in the original unit through notification messages. These messages will be considered belonging to the
321 session scope unit and not the original unit. It is hence not recommended to use <varname>PAMName=</varname> in
322 combination with <varname>NotifyAccess=</varname><option>all</option>.</para>
323 </listitem>
324 </varlistentry>
325
326 </variablelist>
327 </refsect1>
328
329 <refsect1>
330 <title>Capabilities</title>
331
332 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="plural"/>
333
334 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
335
336 <varlistentry>
337 <term><varname>CapabilityBoundingSet=</varname></term>
338
339 <listitem><para>Controls which capabilities to include in the capability bounding set for the executed
340 process. See <citerefentry
341 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
342 details. Takes a whitespace-separated list of capability names, e.g. <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant>,
343 <constant>CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE</constant>, <constant>CAP_SYS_PTRACE</constant>. Capabilities listed will be
344 included in the bounding set, all others are removed. If the list of capabilities is prefixed with
345 <literal>~</literal>, all but the listed capabilities will be included, the effect of the assignment
346 inverted. Note that this option also affects the respective capabilities in the effective, permitted and
347 inheritable capability sets. If this option is not used, the capability bounding set is not modified on process
348 execution, hence no limits on the capabilities of the process are enforced. This option may appear more than
349 once, in which case the bounding sets are merged by <constant>OR</constant>, or by <constant>AND</constant> if
350 the lines are prefixed with <literal>~</literal> (see below). If the empty string is assigned to this option,
351 the bounding set is reset to the empty capability set, and all prior settings have no effect. If set to
352 <literal>~</literal> (without any further argument), the bounding set is reset to the full set of available
353 capabilities, also undoing any previous settings. This does not affect commands prefixed with
354 <literal>+</literal>.</para>
355
356 <para>Example: if a unit has the following,
357 <programlisting>CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_A CAP_B
358 CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_B CAP_C</programlisting>
359 then <constant>CAP_A</constant>, <constant>CAP_B</constant>, and <constant>CAP_C</constant> are set.
360 If the second line is prefixed with <literal>~</literal>, e.g.,
361 <programlisting>CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_A CAP_B
362 CapabilityBoundingSet=~CAP_B CAP_C</programlisting>
363 then, only <constant>CAP_A</constant> is set.</para></listitem>
364 </varlistentry>
365
366 <varlistentry>
367 <term><varname>AmbientCapabilities=</varname></term>
368
369 <listitem><para>Controls which capabilities to include in the ambient capability set for the executed
370 process. Takes a whitespace-separated list of capability names, e.g. <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant>,
371 <constant>CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE</constant>, <constant>CAP_SYS_PTRACE</constant>. This option may appear more than
372 once in which case the ambient capability sets are merged (see the above examples in
373 <varname>CapabilityBoundingSet=</varname>). If the list of capabilities is prefixed with <literal>~</literal>,
374 all but the listed capabilities will be included, the effect of the assignment inverted. If the empty string is
375 assigned to this option, the ambient capability set is reset to the empty capability set, and all prior
376 settings have no effect. If set to <literal>~</literal> (without any further argument), the ambient capability
377 set is reset to the full set of available capabilities, also undoing any previous settings. Note that adding
378 capabilities to ambient capability set adds them to the process's inherited capability set. </para><para>
379 Ambient capability sets are useful if you want to execute a process as a non-privileged user but still want to
380 give it some capabilities. Note that in this case option <constant>keep-caps</constant> is automatically added
381 to <varname>SecureBits=</varname> to retain the capabilities over the user
382 change. <varname>AmbientCapabilities=</varname> does not affect commands prefixed with
383 <literal>+</literal>.</para></listitem>
384 </varlistentry>
385
386 </variablelist>
387 </refsect1>
388
389 <refsect1>
390 <title>Security</title>
391
392 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
393
394 <varlistentry>
395 <term><varname>NoNewPrivileges=</varname></term>
396
397 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, ensures that the service process and all its
398 children can never gain new privileges through <function>execve()</function> (e.g. via setuid or
399 setgid bits, or filesystem capabilities). This is the simplest and most effective way to ensure that
400 a process and its children can never elevate privileges again. Defaults to false, but certain
401 settings override this and ignore the value of this setting. This is the case when
402 <varname>SystemCallFilter=</varname>, <varname>SystemCallArchitectures=</varname>,
403 <varname>RestrictAddressFamilies=</varname>, <varname>RestrictNamespaces=</varname>,
404 <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname>, <varname>ProtectKernelTunables=</varname>,
405 <varname>ProtectKernelModules=</varname>, <varname>MemoryDenyWriteExecute=</varname>,
406 <varname>RestrictRealtime=</varname>, <varname>RestrictSUIDSGID=</varname>,
407 <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> or <varname>LockPersonality=</varname> are specified. Note that even
408 if this setting is overridden by them, <command>systemctl show</command> shows the original value of
409 this setting. Also see <ulink
410 url="https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/userspace-api/no_new_privs.html">No New Privileges
411 Flag</ulink>.</para></listitem>
412 </varlistentry>
413
414 <varlistentry>
415 <term><varname>SecureBits=</varname></term>
416
417 <listitem><para>Controls the secure bits set for the executed process. Takes a space-separated combination of
418 options from the following list: <option>keep-caps</option>, <option>keep-caps-locked</option>,
419 <option>no-setuid-fixup</option>, <option>no-setuid-fixup-locked</option>, <option>noroot</option>, and
420 <option>noroot-locked</option>. This option may appear more than once, in which case the secure bits are
421 ORed. If the empty string is assigned to this option, the bits are reset to 0. This does not affect commands
422 prefixed with <literal>+</literal>. See <citerefentry
423 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
424 details.</para></listitem>
425 </varlistentry>
426
427 </variablelist>
428 </refsect1>
429
430 <refsect1>
431 <title>Mandatory Access Control</title>
432
433 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="plural"/>
434
435 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
436
437 <varlistentry>
438 <term><varname>SELinuxContext=</varname></term>
439
440 <listitem><para>Set the SELinux security context of the executed process. If set, this will override the
441 automated domain transition. However, the policy still needs to authorize the transition. This directive is
442 ignored if SELinux is disabled. If prefixed by <literal>-</literal>, all errors will be ignored. This does not
443 affect commands prefixed with <literal>+</literal>. See <citerefentry
444 project='die-net'><refentrytitle>setexeccon</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
445 details.</para></listitem>
446 </varlistentry>
447
448 <varlistentry>
449 <term><varname>AppArmorProfile=</varname></term>
450
451 <listitem><para>Takes a profile name as argument. The process executed by the unit will switch to this profile
452 when started. Profiles must already be loaded in the kernel, or the unit will fail. This result in a non
453 operation if AppArmor is not enabled. If prefixed by <literal>-</literal>, all errors will be ignored. This
454 does not affect commands prefixed with <literal>+</literal>.</para></listitem>
455 </varlistentry>
456
457 <varlistentry>
458 <term><varname>SmackProcessLabel=</varname></term>
459
460 <listitem><para>Takes a <option>SMACK64</option> security label as argument. The process executed by the unit
461 will be started under this label and SMACK will decide whether the process is allowed to run or not, based on
462 it. The process will continue to run under the label specified here unless the executable has its own
463 <option>SMACK64EXEC</option> label, in which case the process will transition to run under that label. When not
464 specified, the label that systemd is running under is used. This directive is ignored if SMACK is
465 disabled.</para>
466
467 <para>The value may be prefixed by <literal>-</literal>, in which case all errors will be ignored. An empty
468 value may be specified to unset previous assignments. This does not affect commands prefixed with
469 <literal>+</literal>.</para></listitem>
470 </varlistentry>
471
472 </variablelist>
473 </refsect1>
474
475 <refsect1>
476 <title>Process Properties</title>
477
478 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
479
480 <varlistentry>
481 <term><varname>LimitCPU=</varname></term>
482 <term><varname>LimitFSIZE=</varname></term>
483 <term><varname>LimitDATA=</varname></term>
484 <term><varname>LimitSTACK=</varname></term>
485 <term><varname>LimitCORE=</varname></term>
486 <term><varname>LimitRSS=</varname></term>
487 <term><varname>LimitNOFILE=</varname></term>
488 <term><varname>LimitAS=</varname></term>
489 <term><varname>LimitNPROC=</varname></term>
490 <term><varname>LimitMEMLOCK=</varname></term>
491 <term><varname>LimitLOCKS=</varname></term>
492 <term><varname>LimitSIGPENDING=</varname></term>
493 <term><varname>LimitMSGQUEUE=</varname></term>
494 <term><varname>LimitNICE=</varname></term>
495 <term><varname>LimitRTPRIO=</varname></term>
496 <term><varname>LimitRTTIME=</varname></term>
497
498 <listitem><para>Set soft and hard limits on various resources for executed processes. See
499 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>setrlimit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details on
500 the resource limit concept. Resource limits may be specified in two formats: either as single value to set a
501 specific soft and hard limit to the same value, or as colon-separated pair <option>soft:hard</option> to set
502 both limits individually (e.g. <literal>LimitAS=4G:16G</literal>). Use the string <option>infinity</option> to
503 configure no limit on a specific resource. The multiplicative suffixes K, M, G, T, P and E (to the base 1024)
504 may be used for resource limits measured in bytes (e.g. LimitAS=16G). For the limits referring to time values,
505 the usual time units ms, s, min, h and so on may be used (see
506 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
507 details). Note that if no time unit is specified for <varname>LimitCPU=</varname> the default unit of seconds
508 is implied, while for <varname>LimitRTTIME=</varname> the default unit of microseconds is implied. Also, note
509 that the effective granularity of the limits might influence their enforcement. For example, time limits
510 specified for <varname>LimitCPU=</varname> will be rounded up implicitly to multiples of 1s. For
511 <varname>LimitNICE=</varname> the value may be specified in two syntaxes: if prefixed with <literal>+</literal>
512 or <literal>-</literal>, the value is understood as regular Linux nice value in the range -20..19. If not
513 prefixed like this the value is understood as raw resource limit parameter in the range 0..40 (with 0 being
514 equivalent to 1).</para>
515
516 <para>Note that most process resource limits configured with these options are per-process, and processes may
517 fork in order to acquire a new set of resources that are accounted independently of the original process, and
518 may thus escape limits set. Also note that <varname>LimitRSS=</varname> is not implemented on Linux, and
519 setting it has no effect. Often it is advisable to prefer the resource controls listed in
520 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
521 over these per-process limits, as they apply to services as a whole, may be altered dynamically at runtime, and
522 are generally more expressive. For example, <varname>MemoryLimit=</varname> is a more powerful (and working)
523 replacement for <varname>LimitRSS=</varname>.</para>
524
525 <para>For system units these resource limits may be chosen freely. For user units however (i.e. units run by a
526 per-user instance of
527 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>), these limits are
528 bound by (possibly more restrictive) per-user limits enforced by the OS.</para>
529
530 <para>Resource limits not configured explicitly for a unit default to the value configured in the various
531 <varname>DefaultLimitCPU=</varname>, <varname>DefaultLimitFSIZE=</varname>, … options available in
532 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and –
533 if not configured there – the kernel or per-user defaults, as defined by the OS (the latter only for user
534 services, see above).</para>
535
536 <table>
537 <title>Resource limit directives, their equivalent <command>ulimit</command> shell commands and the unit used</title>
538
539 <tgroup cols='3'>
540 <colspec colname='directive' />
541 <colspec colname='equivalent' />
542 <colspec colname='unit' />
543 <thead>
544 <row>
545 <entry>Directive</entry>
546 <entry><command>ulimit</command> equivalent</entry>
547 <entry>Unit</entry>
548 </row>
549 </thead>
550 <tbody>
551 <row>
552 <entry>LimitCPU=</entry>
553 <entry>ulimit -t</entry>
554 <entry>Seconds</entry>
555 </row>
556 <row>
557 <entry>LimitFSIZE=</entry>
558 <entry>ulimit -f</entry>
559 <entry>Bytes</entry>
560 </row>
561 <row>
562 <entry>LimitDATA=</entry>
563 <entry>ulimit -d</entry>
564 <entry>Bytes</entry>
565 </row>
566 <row>
567 <entry>LimitSTACK=</entry>
568 <entry>ulimit -s</entry>
569 <entry>Bytes</entry>
570 </row>
571 <row>
572 <entry>LimitCORE=</entry>
573 <entry>ulimit -c</entry>
574 <entry>Bytes</entry>
575 </row>
576 <row>
577 <entry>LimitRSS=</entry>
578 <entry>ulimit -m</entry>
579 <entry>Bytes</entry>
580 </row>
581 <row>
582 <entry>LimitNOFILE=</entry>
583 <entry>ulimit -n</entry>
584 <entry>Number of File Descriptors</entry>
585 </row>
586 <row>
587 <entry>LimitAS=</entry>
588 <entry>ulimit -v</entry>
589 <entry>Bytes</entry>
590 </row>
591 <row>
592 <entry>LimitNPROC=</entry>
593 <entry>ulimit -u</entry>
594 <entry>Number of Processes</entry>
595 </row>
596 <row>
597 <entry>LimitMEMLOCK=</entry>
598 <entry>ulimit -l</entry>
599 <entry>Bytes</entry>
600 </row>
601 <row>
602 <entry>LimitLOCKS=</entry>
603 <entry>ulimit -x</entry>
604 <entry>Number of Locks</entry>
605 </row>
606 <row>
607 <entry>LimitSIGPENDING=</entry>
608 <entry>ulimit -i</entry>
609 <entry>Number of Queued Signals</entry>
610 </row>
611 <row>
612 <entry>LimitMSGQUEUE=</entry>
613 <entry>ulimit -q</entry>
614 <entry>Bytes</entry>
615 </row>
616 <row>
617 <entry>LimitNICE=</entry>
618 <entry>ulimit -e</entry>
619 <entry>Nice Level</entry>
620 </row>
621 <row>
622 <entry>LimitRTPRIO=</entry>
623 <entry>ulimit -r</entry>
624 <entry>Realtime Priority</entry>
625 </row>
626 <row>
627 <entry>LimitRTTIME=</entry>
628 <entry>No equivalent</entry>
629 <entry>Microseconds</entry>
630 </row>
631 </tbody>
632 </tgroup>
633 </table></listitem>
634 </varlistentry>
635
636 <varlistentry>
637 <term><varname>UMask=</varname></term>
638
639 <listitem><para>Controls the file mode creation mask. Takes an access mode in octal notation. See
640 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>umask</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details. Defaults
641 to 0022.</para></listitem>
642 </varlistentry>
643
644 <varlistentry>
645 <term><varname>KeyringMode=</varname></term>
646
647 <listitem><para>Controls how the kernel session keyring is set up for the service (see <citerefentry
648 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>session-keyring</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
649 details on the session keyring). Takes one of <option>inherit</option>, <option>private</option>,
650 <option>shared</option>. If set to <option>inherit</option> no special keyring setup is done, and the kernel's
651 default behaviour is applied. If <option>private</option> is used a new session keyring is allocated when a
652 service process is invoked, and it is not linked up with any user keyring. This is the recommended setting for
653 system services, as this ensures that multiple services running under the same system user ID (in particular
654 the root user) do not share their key material among each other. If <option>shared</option> is used a new
655 session keyring is allocated as for <option>private</option>, but the user keyring of the user configured with
656 <varname>User=</varname> is linked into it, so that keys assigned to the user may be requested by the unit's
657 processes. In this modes multiple units running processes under the same user ID may share key material. Unless
658 <option>inherit</option> is selected the unique invocation ID for the unit (see below) is added as a protected
659 key by the name <literal>invocation_id</literal> to the newly created session keyring. Defaults to
660 <option>private</option> for services of the system service manager and to <option>inherit</option> for
661 non-service units and for services of the user service manager.</para></listitem>
662 </varlistentry>
663
664 <varlistentry>
665 <term><varname>OOMScoreAdjust=</varname></term>
666
667 <listitem><para>Sets the adjustment value for the Linux kernel's Out-Of-Memory (OOM) killer score for
668 executed processes. Takes an integer between -1000 (to disable OOM killing of processes of this unit)
669 and 1000 (to make killing of processes of this unit under memory pressure very likely). See <ulink
670 url="https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt">proc.txt</ulink> for details. If
671 not specified defaults to the OOM score adjustment level of the service manager itself, which is
672 normally at 0.</para>
673
674 <para>Use the <varname>OOMPolicy=</varname> setting of service units to configure how the service
675 manager shall react to the kernel OOM killer terminating a process of the service. See
676 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
677 for details.</para></listitem>
678 </varlistentry>
679
680 <varlistentry>
681 <term><varname>TimerSlackNSec=</varname></term>
682 <listitem><para>Sets the timer slack in nanoseconds for the executed processes. The timer slack controls the
683 accuracy of wake-ups triggered by timers. See
684 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>prctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for more
685 information. Note that in contrast to most other time span definitions this parameter takes an integer value in
686 nano-seconds if no unit is specified. The usual time units are understood too.</para></listitem>
687 </varlistentry>
688
689 <varlistentry>
690 <term><varname>Personality=</varname></term>
691
692 <listitem><para>Controls which kernel architecture <citerefentry
693 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>uname</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> shall report,
694 when invoked by unit processes. Takes one of the architecture identifiers <constant>x86</constant>,
695 <constant>x86-64</constant>, <constant>ppc</constant>, <constant>ppc-le</constant>, <constant>ppc64</constant>,
696 <constant>ppc64-le</constant>, <constant>s390</constant> or <constant>s390x</constant>. Which personality
697 architectures are supported depends on the system architecture. Usually the 64bit versions of the various
698 system architectures support their immediate 32bit personality architecture counterpart, but no others. For
699 example, <constant>x86-64</constant> systems support the <constant>x86-64</constant> and
700 <constant>x86</constant> personalities but no others. The personality feature is useful when running 32-bit
701 services on a 64-bit host system. If not specified, the personality is left unmodified and thus reflects the
702 personality of the host system's kernel.</para></listitem>
703 </varlistentry>
704
705 <varlistentry>
706 <term><varname>IgnoreSIGPIPE=</varname></term>
707
708 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, causes <constant>SIGPIPE</constant> to be ignored in the
709 executed process. Defaults to true because <constant>SIGPIPE</constant> generally is useful only in shell
710 pipelines.</para></listitem>
711 </varlistentry>
712
713 </variablelist>
714 </refsect1>
715
716 <refsect1>
717 <title>Scheduling</title>
718
719 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
720
721 <varlistentry>
722 <term><varname>Nice=</varname></term>
723
724 <listitem><para>Sets the default nice level (scheduling priority) for executed processes. Takes an integer
725 between -20 (highest priority) and 19 (lowest priority). See
726 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>setpriority</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
727 details.</para></listitem>
728 </varlistentry>
729
730 <varlistentry>
731 <term><varname>CPUSchedulingPolicy=</varname></term>
732
733 <listitem><para>Sets the CPU scheduling policy for executed processes. Takes one of <option>other</option>,
734 <option>batch</option>, <option>idle</option>, <option>fifo</option> or <option>rr</option>. See
735 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sched_setscheduler</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
736 details.</para></listitem>
737 </varlistentry>
738
739 <varlistentry>
740 <term><varname>CPUSchedulingPriority=</varname></term>
741
742 <listitem><para>Sets the CPU scheduling priority for executed processes. The available priority range depends
743 on the selected CPU scheduling policy (see above). For real-time scheduling policies an integer between 1
744 (lowest priority) and 99 (highest priority) can be used. See
745 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sched_setscheduler</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
746 details. </para></listitem>
747 </varlistentry>
748
749 <varlistentry>
750 <term><varname>CPUSchedulingResetOnFork=</varname></term>
751
752 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, elevated CPU scheduling priorities and policies will be
753 reset when the executed processes fork, and can hence not leak into child processes. See
754 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sched_setscheduler</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
755 details. Defaults to false.</para></listitem>
756 </varlistentry>
757
758 <varlistentry>
759 <term><varname>CPUAffinity=</varname></term>
760
761 <listitem><para>Controls the CPU affinity of the executed processes. Takes a list of CPU indices or ranges
762 separated by either whitespace or commas. CPU ranges are specified by the lower and upper CPU indices separated
763 by a dash. This option may be specified more than once, in which case the specified CPU affinity masks are
764 merged. If the empty string is assigned, the mask is reset, all assignments prior to this will have no
765 effect. See
766 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sched_setaffinity</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
767 details.</para></listitem>
768 </varlistentry>
769
770 <varlistentry>
771 <term><varname>NUMAPolicy=</varname></term>
772
773 <listitem><para>Controls the NUMA memory policy of the executed processes. Takes a policy type, one of:
774 <option>default</option>, <option>preferred</option>, <option>bind</option>, <option>interleave</option> and
775 <option>local</option>. A list of NUMA nodes that should be associated with the policy must be specified
776 in <varname>NUMAMask=</varname>. For more details on each policy please see,
777 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>set_mempolicy</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>. For overall
778 overview of NUMA support in Linux see,
779 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>numa</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
780 </para></listitem>
781 </varlistentry>
782
783 <varlistentry>
784 <term><varname>NUMAMask=</varname></term>
785
786 <listitem><para>Controls the NUMA node list which will be applied alongside with selected NUMA policy.
787 Takes a list of NUMA nodes and has the same syntax as a list of CPUs for <varname>CPUAffinity=</varname>
788 option. Note that the list of NUMA nodes is not required for <option>default</option> and <option>local</option>
789 policies and for <option>preferred</option> policy we expect a single NUMA node.</para></listitem>
790 </varlistentry>
791
792 <varlistentry>
793 <term><varname>IOSchedulingClass=</varname></term>
794
795 <listitem><para>Sets the I/O scheduling class for executed processes. Takes an integer between 0 and 3 or one
796 of the strings <option>none</option>, <option>realtime</option>, <option>best-effort</option> or
797 <option>idle</option>. If the empty string is assigned to this option, all prior assignments to both
798 <varname>IOSchedulingClass=</varname> and <varname>IOSchedulingPriority=</varname> have no effect. See
799 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ioprio_set</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
800 details.</para></listitem>
801 </varlistentry>
802
803 <varlistentry>
804 <term><varname>IOSchedulingPriority=</varname></term>
805
806 <listitem><para>Sets the I/O scheduling priority for executed processes. Takes an integer between 0 (highest
807 priority) and 7 (lowest priority). The available priorities depend on the selected I/O scheduling class (see
808 above). If the empty string is assigned to this option, all prior assignments to both
809 <varname>IOSchedulingClass=</varname> and <varname>IOSchedulingPriority=</varname> have no effect.
810 See <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ioprio_set</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
811 details.</para></listitem>
812 </varlistentry>
813
814 </variablelist>
815 </refsect1>
816
817 <refsect1>
818 <title>Sandboxing</title>
819
820 <para>The following sandboxing options are an effective way to limit the exposure of the system towards the unit's
821 processes. It is recommended to turn on as many of these options for each unit as is possible without negatively
822 affecting the process' ability to operate. Note that many of these sandboxing features are gracefully turned off on
823 systems where the underlying security mechanism is not available. For example, <varname>ProtectSystem=</varname>
824 has no effect if the kernel is built without file system namespacing or if the service manager runs in a container
825 manager that makes file system namespacing unavailable to its payload. Similar,
826 <varname>RestrictRealtime=</varname> has no effect on systems that lack support for SECCOMP system call filtering,
827 or in containers where support for this is turned off.</para>
828
829 <para>Also note that some sandboxing functionality is generally not available in user services (i.e. services run
830 by the per-user service manager). Specifically, the various settings requiring file system namespacing support
831 (such as <varname>ProtectSystem=</varname>) are not available, as the underlying kernel functionality is only
832 accessible to privileged processes.</para>
833
834 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
835
836 <varlistentry>
837 <term><varname>ProtectSystem=</varname></term>
838
839 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument or the special values <literal>full</literal> or
840 <literal>strict</literal>. If true, mounts the <filename>/usr</filename> and <filename>/boot</filename>
841 directories read-only for processes invoked by this unit. If set to <literal>full</literal>, the
842 <filename>/etc</filename> directory is mounted read-only, too. If set to <literal>strict</literal> the entire
843 file system hierarchy is mounted read-only, except for the API file system subtrees <filename>/dev</filename>,
844 <filename>/proc</filename> and <filename>/sys</filename> (protect these directories using
845 <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname>, <varname>ProtectKernelTunables=</varname>,
846 <varname>ProtectControlGroups=</varname>). This setting ensures that any modification of the vendor-supplied
847 operating system (and optionally its configuration, and local mounts) is prohibited for the service. It is
848 recommended to enable this setting for all long-running services, unless they are involved with system updates
849 or need to modify the operating system in other ways. If this option is used,
850 <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname> may be used to exclude specific directories from being made read-only. This
851 setting is implied if <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is set. This setting cannot ensure protection in all
852 cases. In general it has the same limitations as <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>, see below. Defaults to
853 off.</para></listitem>
854 </varlistentry>
855
856 <varlistentry>
857 <term><varname>ProtectHome=</varname></term>
858
859 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument or the special values <literal>read-only</literal> or
860 <literal>tmpfs</literal>. If true, the directories <filename>/home</filename>,
861 <filename>/root</filename>, and <filename>/run/user</filename> are made inaccessible and empty for
862 processes invoked by this unit. If set to <literal>read-only</literal>, the three directories are
863 made read-only instead. If set to <literal>tmpfs</literal>, temporary file systems are mounted on the
864 three directories in read-only mode. The value <literal>tmpfs</literal> is useful to hide home
865 directories not relevant to the processes invoked by the unit, while still allowing necessary
866 directories to be made visible when listed in <varname>BindPaths=</varname> or
867 <varname>BindReadOnlyPaths=</varname>.</para>
868
869 <para>Setting this to <literal>yes</literal> is mostly equivalent to set the three directories in
870 <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname>. Similarly, <literal>read-only</literal> is mostly equivalent to
871 <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>, and <literal>tmpfs</literal> is mostly equivalent to
872 <varname>TemporaryFileSystem=</varname> with <literal>:ro</literal>.</para>
873
874 <para>It is recommended to enable this setting for all long-running services (in particular
875 network-facing ones), to ensure they cannot get access to private user data, unless the services
876 actually require access to the user's private data. This setting is implied if
877 <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is set. This setting cannot ensure protection in all cases. In
878 general it has the same limitations as <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>, see below.</para>
879
880 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
881 </varlistentry>
882
883 <varlistentry>
884 <term><varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname></term>
885 <term><varname>StateDirectory=</varname></term>
886 <term><varname>CacheDirectory=</varname></term>
887 <term><varname>LogsDirectory=</varname></term>
888 <term><varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname></term>
889
890 <listitem><para>These options take a whitespace-separated list of directory names. The specified directory
891 names must be relative, and may not include <literal>..</literal>. If set, one or more
892 directories by the specified names will be created (including their parents) below the locations
893 defined in the following table, when the unit is started. Also, the corresponding environment variable
894 is defined with the full path of directories. If multiple directories are set, then in the environment variable
895 the paths are concatenated with colon (<literal>:</literal>).</para>
896 <table>
897 <title>Automatic directory creation and environment variables</title>
898 <tgroup cols='4'>
899 <thead>
900 <row>
901 <entry>Directory</entry>
902 <entry>Below path for system units</entry>
903 <entry>Below path for user units</entry>
904 <entry>Environment variable set</entry>
905 </row>
906 </thead>
907 <tbody>
908 <row>
909 <entry><varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname></entry>
910 <entry><filename>/run/</filename></entry>
911 <entry><varname>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR</varname></entry>
912 <entry><varname>$RUNTIME_DIRECTORY</varname></entry>
913 </row>
914 <row>
915 <entry><varname>StateDirectory=</varname></entry>
916 <entry><filename>/var/lib/</filename></entry>
917 <entry><varname>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</varname></entry>
918 <entry><varname>$STATE_DIRECTORY</varname></entry>
919 </row>
920 <row>
921 <entry><varname>CacheDirectory=</varname></entry>
922 <entry><filename>/var/cache/</filename></entry>
923 <entry><varname>$XDG_CACHE_HOME</varname></entry>
924 <entry><varname>$CACHE_DIRECTORY</varname></entry>
925 </row>
926 <row>
927 <entry><varname>LogsDirectory=</varname></entry>
928 <entry><filename>/var/log/</filename></entry>
929 <entry><varname>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</varname><filename>/log/</filename></entry>
930 <entry><varname>$LOGS_DIRECTORY</varname></entry>
931 </row>
932 <row>
933 <entry><varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname></entry>
934 <entry><filename>/etc/</filename></entry>
935 <entry><varname>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</varname></entry>
936 <entry><varname>$CONFIGURATION_DIRECTORY</varname></entry>
937 </row>
938 </tbody>
939 </tgroup>
940 </table>
941
942 <para>In case of <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname> the innermost subdirectories are removed when
943 the unit is stopped. It is possible to preserve the specified directories in this case if
944 <varname>RuntimeDirectoryPreserve=</varname> is configured to <option>restart</option> or
945 <option>yes</option> (see below). The directories specified with <varname>StateDirectory=</varname>,
946 <varname>CacheDirectory=</varname>, <varname>LogsDirectory=</varname>,
947 <varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname> are not removed when the unit is stopped.</para>
948
949 <para>Except in case of <varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname>, the innermost specified directories will be
950 owned by the user and group specified in <varname>User=</varname> and <varname>Group=</varname>. If the
951 specified directories already exist and their owning user or group do not match the configured ones, all files
952 and directories below the specified directories as well as the directories themselves will have their file
953 ownership recursively changed to match what is configured. As an optimization, if the specified directories are
954 already owned by the right user and group, files and directories below of them are left as-is, even if they do
955 not match what is requested. The innermost specified directories will have their access mode adjusted to the
956 what is specified in <varname>RuntimeDirectoryMode=</varname>, <varname>StateDirectoryMode=</varname>,
957 <varname>CacheDirectoryMode=</varname>, <varname>LogsDirectoryMode=</varname> and
958 <varname>ConfigurationDirectoryMode=</varname>.</para>
959
960 <para>These options imply <varname>BindPaths=</varname> for the specified paths. When combined with
961 <varname>RootDirectory=</varname> or <varname>RootImage=</varname> these paths always reside on the host and
962 are mounted from there into the unit's file system namespace.</para>
963
964 <para>If <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is used in conjunction with <varname>StateDirectory=</varname>,
965 <varname>CacheDirectory=</varname> and <varname>LogsDirectory=</varname> is slightly altered: the directories
966 are created below <filename>/var/lib/private</filename>, <filename>/var/cache/private</filename> and
967 <filename>/var/log/private</filename>, respectively, which are host directories made inaccessible to
968 unprivileged users, which ensures that access to these directories cannot be gained through dynamic user ID
969 recycling. Symbolic links are created to hide this difference in behaviour. Both from perspective of the host
970 and from inside the unit, the relevant directories hence always appear directly below
971 <filename>/var/lib</filename>, <filename>/var/cache</filename> and <filename>/var/log</filename>.</para>
972
973 <para>Use <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname> to manage one or more runtime directories for the unit and bind
974 their lifetime to the daemon runtime. This is particularly useful for unprivileged daemons that cannot create
975 runtime directories in <filename>/run</filename> due to lack of privileges, and to make sure the runtime
976 directory is cleaned up automatically after use. For runtime directories that require more complex or different
977 configuration or lifetime guarantees, please consider using
978 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>tmpfiles.d</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
979
980 <para>The directories defined by these options are always created under the standard paths used by systemd
981 (<filename>/var</filename>, <filename>/run</filename>, <filename>/etc</filename>, …). If the service needs
982 directories in a different location, a different mechanism has to be used to create them.</para>
983
984 <para><citerefentry><refentrytitle>tmpfiles.d</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> provides
985 functionality that overlaps with these options. Using these options is recommended, because the lifetime of
986 the directories is tied directly to the lifetime of the unit, and it is not necessary to ensure that the
987 <filename>tmpfiles.d</filename> configuration is executed before the unit is started.</para>
988
989 <para>To remove any of the directories created by these settings, use the <command>systemctl clean
990 …</command> command on the relevant units, see
991 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
992 details.</para>
993
994 <para>Example: if a system service unit has the following,
995 <programlisting>RuntimeDirectory=foo/bar baz</programlisting>
996 the service manager creates <filename>/run/foo</filename> (if it does not exist),
997 <filename>/run/foo/bar</filename>, and <filename>/run/baz</filename>. The directories
998 <filename>/run/foo/bar</filename> and <filename>/run/baz</filename> except <filename>/run/foo</filename> are
999 owned by the user and group specified in <varname>User=</varname> and <varname>Group=</varname>, and removed
1000 when the service is stopped.</para>
1001
1002 <para>Example: if a system service unit has the following,
1003 <programlisting>RuntimeDirectory=foo/bar
1004 StateDirectory=aaa/bbb ccc</programlisting>
1005 then the environment variable <literal>RUNTIME_DIRECTORY</literal> is set with <literal>/run/foo/bar</literal>, and
1006 <literal>STATE_DIRECTORY</literal> is set with <literal>/var/lib/aaa/bbb:/var/lib/ccc</literal>.</para></listitem>
1007 </varlistentry>
1008
1009 <varlistentry>
1010 <term><varname>RuntimeDirectoryMode=</varname></term>
1011 <term><varname>StateDirectoryMode=</varname></term>
1012 <term><varname>CacheDirectoryMode=</varname></term>
1013 <term><varname>LogsDirectoryMode=</varname></term>
1014 <term><varname>ConfigurationDirectoryMode=</varname></term>
1015
1016 <listitem><para>Specifies the access mode of the directories specified in <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname>,
1017 <varname>StateDirectory=</varname>, <varname>CacheDirectory=</varname>, <varname>LogsDirectory=</varname>, or
1018 <varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname>, respectively, as an octal number. Defaults to
1019 <constant>0755</constant>. See "Permissions" in <citerefentry
1020 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>path_resolution</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for a
1021 discussion of the meaning of permission bits.</para></listitem>
1022 </varlistentry>
1023
1024 <varlistentry>
1025 <term><varname>RuntimeDirectoryPreserve=</varname></term>
1026
1027 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument or <option>restart</option>. If set to <option>no</option> (the
1028 default), the directories specified in <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname> are always removed when the service
1029 stops. If set to <option>restart</option> the directories are preserved when the service is both automatically
1030 and manually restarted. Here, the automatic restart means the operation specified in
1031 <varname>Restart=</varname>, and manual restart means the one triggered by <command>systemctl restart
1032 foo.service</command>. If set to <option>yes</option>, then the directories are not removed when the service is
1033 stopped. Note that since the runtime directory <filename>/run</filename> is a mount point of
1034 <literal>tmpfs</literal>, then for system services the directories specified in
1035 <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname> are removed when the system is rebooted.</para></listitem>
1036 </varlistentry>
1037
1038 <varlistentry>
1039 <term><varname>TimeoutCleanSec=</varname></term>
1040 <listitem><para>Configures a timeout on the clean-up operation requested through <command>systemctl
1041 clean …</command>, see
1042 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
1043 details. Takes the usual time values and defaults to <constant>infinity</constant>, i.e. by default
1044 no time-out is applied. If a time-out is configured the clean operation will be aborted forcibly when
1045 the time-out is reached, potentially leaving resources on disk.</para></listitem>
1046 </varlistentry>
1047
1048 <varlistentry>
1049 <term><varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname></term>
1050 <term><varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname></term>
1051 <term><varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname></term>
1052
1053 <listitem><para>Sets up a new file system namespace for executed processes. These options may be used to limit
1054 access a process might have to the file system hierarchy. Each setting takes a space-separated list of paths
1055 relative to the host's root directory (i.e. the system running the service manager). Note that if paths
1056 contain symlinks, they are resolved relative to the root directory set with
1057 <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname>.</para>
1058
1059 <para>Paths listed in <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname> are accessible from within the namespace with the same
1060 access modes as from outside of it. Paths listed in <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> are accessible for
1061 reading only, writing will be refused even if the usual file access controls would permit this. Nest
1062 <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname> inside of <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> in order to provide writable
1063 subdirectories within read-only directories. Use <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname> in order to whitelist
1064 specific paths for write access if <varname>ProtectSystem=strict</varname> is used.</para>
1065
1066 <para>Paths listed in <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname> will be made inaccessible for processes inside
1067 the namespace along with everything below them in the file system hierarchy. This may be more restrictive than
1068 desired, because it is not possible to nest <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname>, <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>,
1069 <varname>BindPaths=</varname>, or <varname>BindReadOnlyPaths=</varname> inside it. For a more flexible option,
1070 see <varname>TemporaryFileSystem=</varname>.</para>
1071
1072 <para>Non-directory paths may be specified as well. These options may be specified more than once,
1073 in which case all paths listed will have limited access from within the namespace. If the empty string is
1074 assigned to this option, the specific list is reset, and all prior assignments have no effect.</para>
1075
1076 <para>Paths in <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname>, <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and
1077 <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname> may be prefixed with <literal>-</literal>, in which case they will be
1078 ignored when they do not exist. If prefixed with <literal>+</literal> the paths are taken relative to the root
1079 directory of the unit, as configured with <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname>,
1080 instead of relative to the root directory of the host (see above). When combining <literal>-</literal> and
1081 <literal>+</literal> on the same path make sure to specify <literal>-</literal> first, and <literal>+</literal>
1082 second.</para>
1083
1084 <para>Note that these settings will disconnect propagation of mounts from the unit's processes to the
1085 host. This means that this setting may not be used for services which shall be able to install mount points in
1086 the main mount namespace. For <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname> and <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>
1087 propagation in the other direction is not affected, i.e. mounts created on the host generally appear in the
1088 unit processes' namespace, and mounts removed on the host also disappear there too. In particular, note that
1089 mount propagation from host to unit will result in unmodified mounts to be created in the unit's namespace,
1090 i.e. writable mounts appearing on the host will be writable in the unit's namespace too, even when propagated
1091 below a path marked with <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>! Restricting access with these options hence does
1092 not extend to submounts of a directory that are created later on. This means the lock-down offered by that
1093 setting is not complete, and does not offer full protection. </para>
1094
1095 <para>Note that the effect of these settings may be undone by privileged processes. In order to set up an
1096 effective sandboxed environment for a unit it is thus recommended to combine these settings with either
1097 <varname>CapabilityBoundingSet=~CAP_SYS_ADMIN</varname> or
1098 <varname>SystemCallFilter=~@mount</varname>.</para>
1099
1100 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="plural"/></listitem>
1101 </varlistentry>
1102
1103 <varlistentry>
1104 <term><varname>TemporaryFileSystem=</varname></term>
1105
1106 <listitem><para>Takes a space-separated list of mount points for temporary file systems (tmpfs). If set, a new file
1107 system namespace is set up for executed processes, and a temporary file system is mounted on each mount point.
1108 This option may be specified more than once, in which case temporary file systems are mounted on all listed mount
1109 points. If the empty string is assigned to this option, the list is reset, and all prior assignments have no effect.
1110 Each mount point may optionally be suffixed with a colon (<literal>:</literal>) and mount options such as
1111 <literal>size=10%</literal> or <literal>ro</literal>. By default, each temporary file system is mounted
1112 with <literal>nodev,strictatime,mode=0755</literal>. These can be disabled by explicitly specifying the corresponding
1113 mount options, e.g., <literal>dev</literal> or <literal>nostrictatime</literal>.</para>
1114
1115 <para>This is useful to hide files or directories not relevant to the processes invoked by the unit, while necessary
1116 files or directories can be still accessed by combining with <varname>BindPaths=</varname> or
1117 <varname>BindReadOnlyPaths=</varname>:</para>
1118
1119 <para>Example: if a unit has the following,
1120 <programlisting>TemporaryFileSystem=/var:ro
1121 BindReadOnlyPaths=/var/lib/systemd</programlisting>
1122 then the invoked processes by the unit cannot see any files or directories under <filename>/var</filename> except for
1123 <filename>/var/lib/systemd</filename> or its contents.</para>
1124
1125 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1126 </varlistentry>
1127
1128 <varlistentry>
1129 <term><varname>PrivateTmp=</varname></term>
1130
1131 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, sets up a new file system namespace for the executed
1132 processes and mounts private <filename>/tmp</filename> and <filename>/var/tmp</filename> directories inside it
1133 that is not shared by processes outside of the namespace. This is useful to secure access to temporary files of
1134 the process, but makes sharing between processes via <filename>/tmp</filename> or <filename>/var/tmp</filename>
1135 impossible. If this is enabled, all temporary files created by a service in these directories will be removed
1136 after the service is stopped. Defaults to false. It is possible to run two or more units within the same
1137 private <filename>/tmp</filename> and <filename>/var/tmp</filename> namespace by using the
1138 <varname>JoinsNamespaceOf=</varname> directive, see
1139 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
1140 details. This setting is implied if <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is set. For this setting the same
1141 restrictions regarding mount propagation and privileges apply as for <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and
1142 related calls, see above. Enabling this setting has the side effect of adding <varname>Requires=</varname> and
1143 <varname>After=</varname> dependencies on all mount units necessary to access <filename>/tmp</filename> and
1144 <filename>/var/tmp</filename>. Moreover an implicitly <varname>After=</varname> ordering on
1145 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1146 is added.</para>
1147
1148 <para>Note that the implementation of this setting might be impossible (for example if mount namespaces are not
1149 available), and the unit should be written in a way that does not solely rely on this setting for
1150 security.</para>
1151
1152 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1153 </varlistentry>
1154
1155 <varlistentry>
1156 <term><varname>PrivateDevices=</varname></term>
1157
1158 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, sets up a new <filename>/dev</filename> mount for the
1159 executed processes and only adds API pseudo devices such as <filename>/dev/null</filename>,
1160 <filename>/dev/zero</filename> or <filename>/dev/random</filename> (as well as the pseudo TTY subsystem) to it,
1161 but no physical devices such as <filename>/dev/sda</filename>, system memory <filename>/dev/mem</filename>,
1162 system ports <filename>/dev/port</filename> and others. This is useful to securely turn off physical device
1163 access by the executed process. Defaults to false. Enabling this option will install a system call filter to
1164 block low-level I/O system calls that are grouped in the <varname>@raw-io</varname> set, will also remove
1165 <constant>CAP_MKNOD</constant> and <constant>CAP_SYS_RAWIO</constant> from the capability bounding set for the
1166 unit (see above), and set <varname>DevicePolicy=closed</varname> (see
1167 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1168 for details). Note that using this setting will disconnect propagation of mounts from the service to the host
1169 (propagation in the opposite direction continues to work). This means that this setting may not be used for
1170 services which shall be able to install mount points in the main mount namespace. The new
1171 <filename>/dev</filename> will be mounted read-only and 'noexec'. The latter may break old programs which try
1172 to set up executable memory by using
1173 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> of
1174 <filename>/dev/zero</filename> instead of using <constant>MAP_ANON</constant>. For this setting the same
1175 restrictions regarding mount propagation and privileges apply as for <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and
1176 related calls, see above. If turned on and if running in user mode, or in system mode, but without the
1177 <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting <varname>User=</varname>),
1178 <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied.</para>
1179
1180 <para>Note that the implementation of this setting might be impossible (for example if mount namespaces are not
1181 available), and the unit should be written in a way that does not solely rely on this setting for
1182 security.</para>
1183
1184 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1185 </varlistentry>
1186
1187 <varlistentry>
1188 <term><varname>PrivateNetwork=</varname></term>
1189
1190 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, sets up a new network namespace for the executed processes
1191 and configures only the loopback network device <literal>lo</literal> inside it. No other network devices will
1192 be available to the executed process. This is useful to turn off network access by the executed process.
1193 Defaults to false. It is possible to run two or more units within the same private network namespace by using
1194 the <varname>JoinsNamespaceOf=</varname> directive, see
1195 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
1196 details. Note that this option will disconnect all socket families from the host, including
1197 <constant>AF_NETLINK</constant> and <constant>AF_UNIX</constant>. Effectively, for
1198 <constant>AF_NETLINK</constant> this means that device configuration events received from
1199 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-udevd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> are
1200 not delivered to the unit's processes. And for <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> this has the effect that
1201 <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> sockets in the abstract socket namespace of the host will become unavailable to
1202 the unit's processes (however, those located in the file system will continue to be accessible).</para>
1203
1204 <para>Note that the implementation of this setting might be impossible (for example if network namespaces are
1205 not available), and the unit should be written in a way that does not solely rely on this setting for
1206 security.</para>
1207
1208 <para>When this option is used on a socket unit any sockets bound on behalf of this unit will be
1209 bound within a private network namespace. This may be combined with
1210 <varname>JoinsNamespaceOf=</varname> to listen on sockets inside of network namespaces of other
1211 services.</para>
1212
1213 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1214 </varlistentry>
1215
1216 <varlistentry>
1217 <term><varname>NetworkNamespacePath=</varname></term>
1218
1219 <listitem><para>Takes an absolute file system path refererring to a Linux network namespace
1220 pseudo-file (i.e. a file like <filename>/proc/$PID/ns/net</filename> or a bind mount or symlink to
1221 one). When set the invoked processes are added to the network namespace referenced by that path. The
1222 path has to point to a valid namespace file at the moment the processes are forked off. If this
1223 option is used <varname>PrivateNetwork=</varname> has no effect. If this option is used together with
1224 <varname>JoinsNamespaceOf=</varname> then it only has an effect if this unit is started before any of
1225 the listed units that have <varname>PrivateNetwork=</varname> or
1226 <varname>NetworkNamespacePath=</varname> configured, as otherwise the network namespace of those
1227 units is reused.</para>
1228
1229 <para>When this option is used on a socket unit any sockets bound on behalf of this unit will be
1230 bound within the specified network namespace.</para>
1231
1232 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1233 </varlistentry>
1234
1235 <varlistentry>
1236 <term><varname>PrivateUsers=</varname></term>
1237
1238 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, sets up a new user namespace for the executed processes and
1239 configures a minimal user and group mapping, that maps the <literal>root</literal> user and group as well as
1240 the unit's own user and group to themselves and everything else to the <literal>nobody</literal> user and
1241 group. This is useful to securely detach the user and group databases used by the unit from the rest of the
1242 system, and thus to create an effective sandbox environment. All files, directories, processes, IPC objects and
1243 other resources owned by users/groups not equaling <literal>root</literal> or the unit's own will stay visible
1244 from within the unit but appear owned by the <literal>nobody</literal> user and group. If this mode is enabled,
1245 all unit processes are run without privileges in the host user namespace (regardless if the unit's own
1246 user/group is <literal>root</literal> or not). Specifically this means that the process will have zero process
1247 capabilities on the host's user namespace, but full capabilities within the service's user namespace. Settings
1248 such as <varname>CapabilityBoundingSet=</varname> will affect only the latter, and there's no way to acquire
1249 additional capabilities in the host's user namespace. Defaults to off.</para>
1250
1251 <para>This setting is particularly useful in conjunction with
1252 <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname>, as the need to synchronize the user and group
1253 databases in the root directory and on the host is reduced, as the only users and groups who need to be matched
1254 are <literal>root</literal>, <literal>nobody</literal> and the unit's own user and group.</para>
1255
1256 <para>Note that the implementation of this setting might be impossible (for example if user namespaces are not
1257 available), and the unit should be written in a way that does not solely rely on this setting for
1258 security.</para>
1259
1260 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1261 </varlistentry>
1262
1263 <varlistentry>
1264 <term><varname>ProtectHostname=</varname></term>
1265
1266 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. When set, sets up a new UTS namespace for the executed
1267 processes. In addition, changing hostname or domainname is prevented. Defaults to off.</para>
1268
1269 <para>Note that the implementation of this setting might be impossible (for example if UTS namespaces
1270 are not available), and the unit should be written in a way that does not solely rely on this setting
1271 for security.</para>
1272
1273 <para>Note that when this option is enabled for a service hostname changes no longer propagate from
1274 the system into the service, it is hence not suitable for services that need to take notice of system
1275 hostname changes dynamically.</para>
1276
1277 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1278 </varlistentry>
1279
1280 <varlistentry>
1281 <term><varname>ProtectKernelTunables=</varname></term>
1282
1283 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, kernel variables accessible through
1284 <filename>/proc/sys</filename>, <filename>/sys</filename>, <filename>/proc/sysrq-trigger</filename>,
1285 <filename>/proc/latency_stats</filename>, <filename>/proc/acpi</filename>,
1286 <filename>/proc/timer_stats</filename>, <filename>/proc/fs</filename> and <filename>/proc/irq</filename> will
1287 be made read-only to all processes of the unit. Usually, tunable kernel variables should be initialized only at
1288 boot-time, for example with the
1289 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sysctl.d</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> mechanism. Few
1290 services need to write to these at runtime; it is hence recommended to turn this on for most services. For this
1291 setting the same restrictions regarding mount propagation and privileges apply as for
1292 <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and related calls, see above. Defaults to off. If turned on and if running
1293 in user mode, or in system mode, but without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. services
1294 for which <varname>User=</varname> is set), <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied. Note that this
1295 option does not prevent indirect changes to kernel tunables effected by IPC calls to other processes. However,
1296 <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname> may be used to make relevant IPC file system objects inaccessible. If
1297 <varname>ProtectKernelTunables=</varname> is set, <varname>MountAPIVFS=yes</varname> is
1298 implied.</para>
1299
1300 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1301 </varlistentry>
1302
1303 <varlistentry>
1304 <term><varname>ProtectKernelModules=</varname></term>
1305
1306 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, explicit module loading will be denied. This allows
1307 module load and unload operations to be turned off on modular kernels. It is recommended to turn this on for most services
1308 that do not need special file systems or extra kernel modules to work. Defaults to off. Enabling this option
1309 removes <constant>CAP_SYS_MODULE</constant> from the capability bounding set for the unit, and installs a
1310 system call filter to block module system calls, also <filename>/usr/lib/modules</filename> is made
1311 inaccessible. For this setting the same restrictions regarding mount propagation and privileges apply as for
1312 <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and related calls, see above. Note that limited automatic module loading due
1313 to user configuration or kernel mapping tables might still happen as side effect of requested user operations,
1314 both privileged and unprivileged. To disable module auto-load feature please see
1315 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sysctl.d</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1316 <constant>kernel.modules_disabled</constant> mechanism and
1317 <filename>/proc/sys/kernel/modules_disabled</filename> documentation. If turned on and if running in user
1318 mode, or in system mode, but without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting
1319 <varname>User=</varname>), <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied.</para>
1320
1321 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1322 </varlistentry>
1323
1324 <varlistentry>
1325 <term><varname>ProtectControlGroups=</varname></term>
1326
1327 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, the Linux Control Groups (<citerefentry
1328 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>cgroups</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>) hierarchies
1329 accessible through <filename>/sys/fs/cgroup</filename> will be made read-only to all processes of the
1330 unit. Except for container managers no services should require write access to the control groups hierarchies;
1331 it is hence recommended to turn this on for most services. For this setting the same restrictions regarding
1332 mount propagation and privileges apply as for <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and related calls, see
1333 above. Defaults to off. If <varname>ProtectControlGroups=</varname> is set, <varname>MountAPIVFS=yes</varname>
1334 is implied.</para>
1335
1336 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1337 </varlistentry>
1338
1339 <varlistentry>
1340 <term><varname>RestrictAddressFamilies=</varname></term>
1341
1342 <listitem><para>Restricts the set of socket address families accessible to the processes of this unit. Takes a
1343 space-separated list of address family names to whitelist, such as <constant>AF_UNIX</constant>,
1344 <constant>AF_INET</constant> or <constant>AF_INET6</constant>. When prefixed with <constant>~</constant> the
1345 listed address families will be applied as blacklist, otherwise as whitelist. Note that this restricts access
1346 to the <citerefentry
1347 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system call
1348 only. Sockets passed into the process by other means (for example, by using socket activation with socket
1349 units, see <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>)
1350 are unaffected. Also, sockets created with <function>socketpair()</function> (which creates connected AF_UNIX
1351 sockets only) are unaffected. Note that this option has no effect on 32-bit x86, s390, s390x, mips, mips-le,
1352 ppc, ppc-le, pcc64, ppc64-le and is ignored (but works correctly on other ABIs, including x86-64). Note that on
1353 systems supporting multiple ABIs (such as x86/x86-64) it is recommended to turn off alternative ABIs for
1354 services, so that they cannot be used to circumvent the restrictions of this option. Specifically, it is
1355 recommended to combine this option with <varname>SystemCallArchitectures=native</varname> or similar. If
1356 running in user mode, or in system mode, but without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability
1357 (e.g. setting <varname>User=nobody</varname>), <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied. By default,
1358 no restrictions apply, all address families are accessible to processes. If assigned the empty string, any
1359 previous address family restriction changes are undone. This setting does not affect commands prefixed with
1360 <literal>+</literal>.</para>
1361
1362 <para>Use this option to limit exposure of processes to remote access, in particular via exotic and sensitive
1363 network protocols, such as <constant>AF_PACKET</constant>. Note that in most cases, the local
1364 <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> address family should be included in the configured whitelist as it is frequently
1365 used for local communication, including for
1366 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>syslog</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1367 logging.</para></listitem>
1368 </varlistentry>
1369
1370 <varlistentry>
1371 <term><varname>RestrictNamespaces=</varname></term>
1372
1373 <listitem><para>Restricts access to Linux namespace functionality for the processes of this unit. For details
1374 about Linux namespaces, see <citerefentry
1375 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>namespaces</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>. Either
1376 takes a boolean argument, or a space-separated list of namespace type identifiers. If false (the default), no
1377 restrictions on namespace creation and switching are made. If true, access to any kind of namespacing is
1378 prohibited. Otherwise, a space-separated list of namespace type identifiers must be specified, consisting of
1379 any combination of: <constant>cgroup</constant>, <constant>ipc</constant>, <constant>net</constant>,
1380 <constant>mnt</constant>, <constant>pid</constant>, <constant>user</constant> and <constant>uts</constant>. Any
1381 namespace type listed is made accessible to the unit's processes, access to namespace types not listed is
1382 prohibited (whitelisting). By prepending the list with a single tilde character (<literal>~</literal>) the
1383 effect may be inverted: only the listed namespace types will be made inaccessible, all unlisted ones are
1384 permitted (blacklisting). If the empty string is assigned, the default namespace restrictions are applied,
1385 which is equivalent to false. This option may appear more than once, in which case the namespace types are
1386 merged by <constant>OR</constant>, or by <constant>AND</constant> if the lines are prefixed with
1387 <literal>~</literal> (see examples below). Internally, this setting limits access to the
1388 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>unshare</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1389 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>clone</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and
1390 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>setns</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system calls, taking
1391 the specified flags parameters into account. Note that — if this option is used — in addition to restricting
1392 creation and switching of the specified types of namespaces (or all of them, if true) access to the
1393 <function>setns()</function> system call with a zero flags parameter is prohibited. This setting is only
1394 supported on x86, x86-64, mips, mips-le, mips64, mips64-le, mips64-n32, mips64-le-n32, ppc64, ppc64-le, s390
1395 and s390x, and enforces no restrictions on other architectures. If running in user mode, or in system mode, but
1396 without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting <varname>User=</varname>),
1397 <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied.</para>
1398
1399 <para>Example: if a unit has the following,
1400 <programlisting>RestrictNamespaces=cgroup ipc
1401 RestrictNamespaces=cgroup net</programlisting>
1402 then <constant>cgroup</constant>, <constant>ipc</constant>, and <constant>net</constant> are set.
1403 If the second line is prefixed with <literal>~</literal>, e.g.,
1404 <programlisting>RestrictNamespaces=cgroup ipc
1405 RestrictNamespaces=~cgroup net</programlisting>
1406 then, only <constant>ipc</constant> is set.</para></listitem>
1407 </varlistentry>
1408
1409 <varlistentry>
1410 <term><varname>LockPersonality=</varname></term>
1411
1412 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If set, locks down the <citerefentry
1413 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>personality</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system
1414 call so that the kernel execution domain may not be changed from the default or the personality selected with
1415 <varname>Personality=</varname> directive. This may be useful to improve security, because odd personality
1416 emulations may be poorly tested and source of vulnerabilities. If running in user mode, or in system mode, but
1417 without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting <varname>User=</varname>),
1418 <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied.</para></listitem>
1419 </varlistentry>
1420
1421 <varlistentry>
1422 <term><varname>MemoryDenyWriteExecute=</varname></term>
1423
1424 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If set, attempts to create memory mappings that are writable and
1425 executable at the same time, or to change existing memory mappings to become executable, or mapping shared
1426 memory segments as executable are prohibited. Specifically, a system call filter is added that rejects
1427 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system calls with both
1428 <constant>PROT_EXEC</constant> and <constant>PROT_WRITE</constant> set,
1429 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>mprotect</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> or
1430 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>pkey_mprotect</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system calls
1431 with <constant>PROT_EXEC</constant> set and
1432 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>shmat</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system calls with
1433 <constant>SHM_EXEC</constant> set. Note that this option is incompatible with programs and libraries that
1434 generate program code dynamically at runtime, including JIT execution engines, executable stacks, and code
1435 "trampoline" feature of various C compilers. This option improves service security, as it makes harder for
1436 software exploits to change running code dynamically. However, the protection can be circumvented, if
1437 the service can write to a filesystem, which is not mounted with <constant>noexec</constant> (such as
1438 <filename>/dev/shm</filename>), or it can use <function>memfd_create()</function>. This can be
1439 prevented by making such file systems inaccessible to the service
1440 (e.g. <varname>InaccessiblePaths=/dev/shm</varname>) and installing further system call filters
1441 (<varname>SystemCallFilter=~memfd_create</varname>). Note that this feature is fully available on
1442 x86-64, and partially on x86. Specifically, the <function>shmat()</function> protection is not
1443 available on x86. Note that on systems supporting multiple ABIs (such as x86/x86-64) it is
1444 recommended to turn off alternative ABIs for services, so that they cannot be used to circumvent the
1445 restrictions of this option. Specifically, it is recommended to combine this option with
1446 <varname>SystemCallArchitectures=native</varname> or similar. If running in user mode, or in system
1447 mode, but without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting
1448 <varname>User=</varname>), <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied.</para></listitem>
1449 </varlistentry>
1450
1451 <varlistentry>
1452 <term><varname>RestrictRealtime=</varname></term>
1453
1454 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If set, any attempts to enable realtime scheduling in a process of
1455 the unit are refused. This restricts access to realtime task scheduling policies such as
1456 <constant>SCHED_FIFO</constant>, <constant>SCHED_RR</constant> or <constant>SCHED_DEADLINE</constant>. See
1457 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>sched</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1458 for details about these scheduling policies. If running in user mode, or in system mode, but without the
1459 <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting <varname>User=</varname>),
1460 <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied. Realtime scheduling policies may be used to monopolize CPU
1461 time for longer periods of time, and may hence be used to lock up or otherwise trigger Denial-of-Service
1462 situations on the system. It is hence recommended to restrict access to realtime scheduling to the few programs
1463 that actually require them. Defaults to off.</para></listitem>
1464 </varlistentry>
1465
1466 <varlistentry>
1467 <term><varname>RestrictSUIDSGID=</varname></term>
1468
1469 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If set, any attempts to set the set-user-ID (SUID) or
1470 set-group-ID (SGID) bits on files or directories will be denied (for details on these bits see
1471 <citerefentry
1472 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>inode</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>). If
1473 running in user mode, or in system mode, but without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant>
1474 capability (e.g. setting <varname>User=</varname>), <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is
1475 implied. As the SUID/SGID bits are mechanisms to elevate privileges, and allows users to acquire the
1476 identity of other users, it is recommended to restrict creation of SUID/SGID files to the few
1477 programs that actually require them. Note that this restricts marking of any type of file system
1478 object with these bits, including both regular files and directories (where the SGID is a different
1479 meaning than for files, see documentation). This option is implied if <varname>DynamicUser=</varname>
1480 is enabled. Defaults to off.</para></listitem>
1481 </varlistentry>
1482
1483 <varlistentry>
1484 <term><varname>RemoveIPC=</varname></term>
1485
1486 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean parameter. If set, all System V and POSIX IPC objects owned by the user and
1487 group the processes of this unit are run as are removed when the unit is stopped. This setting only has an
1488 effect if at least one of <varname>User=</varname>, <varname>Group=</varname> and
1489 <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> are used. It has no effect on IPC objects owned by the root user. Specifically,
1490 this removes System V semaphores, as well as System V and POSIX shared memory segments and message queues. If
1491 multiple units use the same user or group the IPC objects are removed when the last of these units is
1492 stopped. This setting is implied if <varname>DynamicUser=</varname> is set.</para>
1493
1494 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1495 </varlistentry>
1496
1497 <varlistentry>
1498 <term><varname>PrivateMounts=</varname></term>
1499
1500 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean parameter. If set, the processes of this unit will be run in their own private
1501 file system (mount) namespace with all mount propagation from the processes towards the host's main file system
1502 namespace turned off. This means any file system mount points established or removed by the unit's processes
1503 will be private to them and not be visible to the host. However, file system mount points established or
1504 removed on the host will be propagated to the unit's processes. See <citerefentry
1505 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mount_namespaces</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
1506 details on file system namespaces. Defaults to off.</para>
1507
1508 <para>When turned on, this executes three operations for each invoked process: a new
1509 <constant>CLONE_NEWNS</constant> namespace is created, after which all existing mounts are remounted to
1510 <constant>MS_SLAVE</constant> to disable propagation from the unit's processes to the host (but leaving
1511 propagation in the opposite direction in effect). Finally, the mounts are remounted again to the propagation
1512 mode configured with <varname>MountFlags=</varname>, see below.</para>
1513
1514 <para>File system namespaces are set up individually for each process forked off by the service manager. Mounts
1515 established in the namespace of the process created by <varname>ExecStartPre=</varname> will hence be cleaned
1516 up automatically as soon as that process exits and will not be available to subsequent processes forked off for
1517 <varname>ExecStart=</varname> (and similar applies to the various other commands configured for
1518 units). Similarly, <varname>JoinsNamespaceOf=</varname> does not permit sharing kernel mount namespaces between
1519 units, it only enables sharing of the <filename>/tmp/</filename> and <filename>/var/tmp/</filename>
1520 directories.</para>
1521
1522 <para>Other file system namespace unit settings — <varname>PrivateMounts=</varname>,
1523 <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname>, <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname>, <varname>ProtectSystem=</varname>,
1524 <varname>ProtectHome=</varname>, <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>, <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname>,
1525 <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname>, … — also enable file system namespacing in a fashion equivalent to this
1526 option. Hence it is primarily useful to explicitly request this behaviour if none of the other settings are
1527 used.</para>
1528
1529 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1530 </varlistentry>
1531
1532 <varlistentry>
1533 <term><varname>MountFlags=</varname></term>
1534
1535 <listitem><para>Takes a mount propagation setting: <option>shared</option>, <option>slave</option> or
1536 <option>private</option>, which controls whether file system mount points in the file system namespaces set up
1537 for this unit's processes will receive or propagate mounts and unmounts from other file system namespaces. See
1538 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1539 for details on mount propagation, and the three propagation flags in particular.</para>
1540
1541 <para>This setting only controls the <emphasis>final</emphasis> propagation setting in effect on all mount
1542 points of the file system namespace created for each process of this unit. Other file system namespacing unit
1543 settings (see the discussion in <varname>PrivateMounts=</varname> above) will implicitly disable mount and
1544 unmount propagation from the unit's processes towards the host by changing the propagation setting of all mount
1545 points in the unit's file system namepace to <option>slave</option> first. Setting this option to
1546 <option>shared</option> does not reestablish propagation in that case.</para>
1547
1548 <para>If not set – but file system namespaces are enabled through another file system namespace unit setting –
1549 <option>shared</option> mount propagation is used, but — as mentioned — as <option>slave</option> is applied
1550 first, propagation from the unit's processes to the host is still turned off.</para>
1551
1552 <para>It is not recommended to to use <option>private</option> mount propagation for units, as this means
1553 temporary mounts (such as removable media) of the host will stay mounted and thus indefinitely busy in forked
1554 off processes, as unmount propagation events won't be received by the file system namespace of the unit.</para>
1555
1556 <para>Usually, it is best to leave this setting unmodified, and use higher level file system namespacing
1557 options instead, in particular <varname>PrivateMounts=</varname>, see above.</para>
1558
1559 <xi:include href="system-only.xml" xpointer="singular"/></listitem>
1560 </varlistentry>
1561
1562 </variablelist>
1563 </refsect1>
1564
1565 <refsect1>
1566 <title>System Call Filtering</title>
1567 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
1568
1569 <varlistentry>
1570 <term><varname>SystemCallFilter=</varname></term>
1571
1572 <listitem><para>Takes a space-separated list of system call names. If this setting is used, all
1573 system calls executed by the unit processes except for the listed ones will result in immediate
1574 process termination with the <constant>SIGSYS</constant> signal (whitelisting). (See
1575 <varname>SystemCallErrorNumber=</varname> below for changing the default action). If the first
1576 character of the list is <literal>~</literal>, the effect is inverted: only the listed system calls
1577 will result in immediate process termination (blacklisting). Blacklisted system calls and system call
1578 groups may optionally be suffixed with a colon (<literal>:</literal>) and <literal>errno</literal>
1579 error number (between 0 and 4095) or errno name such as <constant>EPERM</constant>,
1580 <constant>EACCES</constant> or <constant>EUCLEAN</constant> (see <citerefentry
1581 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>errno</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> for a
1582 full list). This value will be returned when a blacklisted system call is triggered, instead of
1583 terminating the processes immediately. This value takes precedence over the one given in
1584 <varname>SystemCallErrorNumber=</varname>, see below. If running in user mode, or in system mode,
1585 but without the <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting
1586 <varname>User=nobody</varname>), <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied. This feature
1587 makes use of the Secure Computing Mode 2 interfaces of the kernel ('seccomp filtering') and is useful
1588 for enforcing a minimal sandboxing environment. Note that the <function>execve</function>,
1589 <function>exit</function>, <function>exit_group</function>, <function>getrlimit</function>,
1590 <function>rt_sigreturn</function>, <function>sigreturn</function> system calls and the system calls
1591 for querying time and sleeping are implicitly whitelisted and do not need to be listed
1592 explicitly. This option may be specified more than once, in which case the filter masks are
1593 merged. If the empty string is assigned, the filter is reset, all prior assignments will have no
1594 effect. This does not affect commands prefixed with <literal>+</literal>.</para>
1595
1596 <para>Note that on systems supporting multiple ABIs (such as x86/x86-64) it is recommended to turn off
1597 alternative ABIs for services, so that they cannot be used to circumvent the restrictions of this
1598 option. Specifically, it is recommended to combine this option with
1599 <varname>SystemCallArchitectures=native</varname> or similar.</para>
1600
1601 <para>Note that strict system call filters may impact execution and error handling code paths of the service
1602 invocation. Specifically, access to the <function>execve</function> system call is required for the execution
1603 of the service binary — if it is blocked service invocation will necessarily fail. Also, if execution of the
1604 service binary fails for some reason (for example: missing service executable), the error handling logic might
1605 require access to an additional set of system calls in order to process and log this failure correctly. It
1606 might be necessary to temporarily disable system call filters in order to simplify debugging of such
1607 failures.</para>
1608
1609 <para>If you specify both types of this option (i.e. whitelisting and blacklisting), the first encountered
1610 will take precedence and will dictate the default action (termination or approval of a system call). Then the
1611 next occurrences of this option will add or delete the listed system calls from the set of the filtered system
1612 calls, depending of its type and the default action. (For example, if you have started with a whitelisting of
1613 <function>read</function> and <function>write</function>, and right after it add a blacklisting of
1614 <function>write</function>, then <function>write</function> will be removed from the set.)</para>
1615
1616 <para>As the number of possible system calls is large, predefined sets of system calls are provided. A set
1617 starts with <literal>@</literal> character, followed by name of the set.
1618
1619 <table>
1620 <title>Currently predefined system call sets</title>
1621
1622 <tgroup cols='2'>
1623 <colspec colname='set' />
1624 <colspec colname='description' />
1625 <thead>
1626 <row>
1627 <entry>Set</entry>
1628 <entry>Description</entry>
1629 </row>
1630 </thead>
1631 <tbody>
1632 <row>
1633 <entry>@aio</entry>
1634 <entry>Asynchronous I/O (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>io_setup</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>io_submit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and related calls)</entry>
1635 </row>
1636 <row>
1637 <entry>@basic-io</entry>
1638 <entry>System calls for basic I/O: reading, writing, seeking, file descriptor duplication and closing (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>read</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>write</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and related calls)</entry>
1639 </row>
1640 <row>
1641 <entry>@chown</entry>
1642 <entry>Changing file ownership (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>chown</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>fchownat</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and related calls)</entry>
1643 </row>
1644 <row>
1645 <entry>@clock</entry>
1646 <entry>System calls for changing the system clock (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>adjtimex</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>settimeofday</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and related calls)</entry>
1647 </row>
1648 <row>
1649 <entry>@cpu-emulation</entry>
1650 <entry>System calls for CPU emulation functionality (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>vm86</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and related calls)</entry>
1651 </row>
1652 <row>
1653 <entry>@debug</entry>
1654 <entry>Debugging, performance monitoring and tracing functionality (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>ptrace</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>perf_event_open</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and related calls)</entry>
1655 </row>
1656 <row>
1657 <entry>@file-system</entry>
1658 <entry>File system operations: opening, creating files and directories for read and write, renaming and removing them, reading file properties, or creating hard and symbolic links.</entry>
1659 </row>
1660 <row>
1661 <entry>@io-event</entry>
1662 <entry>Event loop system calls (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>poll</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>select</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>epoll</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>eventfd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and related calls)</entry>
1663 </row>
1664 <row>
1665 <entry>@ipc</entry>
1666 <entry>Pipes, SysV IPC, POSIX Message Queues and other IPC (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mq_overview</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>svipc</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
1667 </row>
1668 <row>
1669 <entry>@keyring</entry>
1670 <entry>Kernel keyring access (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>keyctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and related calls)</entry>
1671 </row>
1672 <row>
1673 <entry>@memlock</entry>
1674 <entry>Locking of memory into RAM (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mlock</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mlockall</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and related calls)</entry>
1675 </row>
1676 <row>
1677 <entry>@module</entry>
1678 <entry>Loading and unloading of kernel modules (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>init_module</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>delete_module</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> and related calls)</entry>
1679 </row>
1680 <row>
1681 <entry>@mount</entry>
1682 <entry>Mounting and unmounting of file systems (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>chroot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and related calls)</entry>
1683 </row>
1684 <row>
1685 <entry>@network-io</entry>
1686 <entry>Socket I/O (including local AF_UNIX): <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>unix</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry></entry>
1687 </row>
1688 <row>
1689 <entry>@obsolete</entry>
1690 <entry>Unusual, obsolete or unimplemented (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>create_module</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>gtty</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, …)</entry>
1691 </row>
1692 <row>
1693 <entry>@privileged</entry>
1694 <entry>All system calls which need super-user capabilities (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
1695 </row>
1696 <row>
1697 <entry>@process</entry>
1698 <entry>Process control, execution, namespaceing operations (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>clone</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>kill</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>namespaces</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>, …</entry>
1699 </row>
1700 <row>
1701 <entry>@raw-io</entry>
1702 <entry>Raw I/O port access (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>ioperm</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>iopl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <function>pciconfig_read()</function>, …)</entry>
1703 </row>
1704 <row>
1705 <entry>@reboot</entry>
1706 <entry>System calls for rebooting and reboot preparation (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>reboot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <function>kexec()</function>, …)</entry>
1707 </row>
1708 <row>
1709 <entry>@resources</entry>
1710 <entry>System calls for changing resource limits, memory and scheduling parameters (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>setrlimit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>setpriority</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, …)</entry>
1711 </row>
1712 <row>
1713 <entry>@setuid</entry>
1714 <entry>System calls for changing user ID and group ID credentials, (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>setuid</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>setgid</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>setresuid</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, …)</entry>
1715 </row>
1716 <row>
1717 <entry>@signal</entry>
1718 <entry>System calls for manipulating and handling process signals (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>signal</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>sigprocmask</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, …)</entry>
1719 </row>
1720 <row>
1721 <entry>@swap</entry>
1722 <entry>System calls for enabling/disabling swap devices (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>swapon</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>swapoff</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>)</entry>
1723 </row>
1724 <row>
1725 <entry>@sync</entry>
1726 <entry>Synchronizing files and memory to disk: (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>fsync</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>msync</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, and related calls)</entry>
1727 </row>
1728 <row>
1729 <entry>@system-service</entry>
1730 <entry>A reasonable set of system calls used by common system services, excluding any special purpose calls. This is the recommended starting point for whitelisting system calls for system services, as it contains what is typically needed by system services, but excludes overly specific interfaces. For example, the following APIs are excluded: <literal>@clock</literal>, <literal>@mount</literal>, <literal>@swap</literal>, <literal>@reboot</literal>.</entry>
1731 </row>
1732 <row>
1733 <entry>@timer</entry>
1734 <entry>System calls for scheduling operations by time (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>alarm</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>timer_create</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>, …)</entry>
1735 </row>
1736 </tbody>
1737 </tgroup>
1738 </table>
1739
1740 Note, that as new system calls are added to the kernel, additional system calls might be added to the groups
1741 above. Contents of the sets may also change between systemd versions. In addition, the list of system calls
1742 depends on the kernel version and architecture for which systemd was compiled. Use
1743 <command>systemd-analyze syscall-filter</command> to list the actual list of system calls in each
1744 filter.</para>
1745
1746 <para>Generally, whitelisting system calls (rather than blacklisting) is the safer mode of operation. It is
1747 recommended to enforce system call whitelists for all long-running system services. Specifically, the
1748 following lines are a relatively safe basic choice for the majority of system services:</para>
1749
1750 <programlisting>[Service]
1751 SystemCallFilter=@system-service
1752 SystemCallErrorNumber=EPERM</programlisting>
1753
1754 <para>Note that various kernel system calls are defined redundantly: there are multiple system calls
1755 for executing the same operation. For example, the <function>pidfd_send_signal()</function> system
1756 call may be used to execute operations similar to what can be done with the older
1757 <function>kill()</function> system call, hence blocking the latter without the former only provides
1758 weak protection. Since new system calls are added regularly to the kernel as development progresses,
1759 keeping system call blacklists comprehensive requires constant work. It is thus recommended to use
1760 whitelisting instead, which offers the benefit that new system calls are by default implicitly
1761 blocked until the whitelist is updated.</para>
1762
1763 <para>Also note that a number of system calls are required to be accessible for the dynamic linker to
1764 work. The dynamic linker is required for running most regular programs (specifically: all dynamic ELF
1765 binaries, which is how most distributions build packaged programs). This means that blocking these
1766 system calls (which include <function>open()</function>, <function>openat()</function> or
1767 <function>mmap()</function>) will make most programs typically shipped with generic distributions
1768 unusable.</para>
1769
1770 <para>It is recommended to combine the file system namespacing related options with
1771 <varname>SystemCallFilter=~@mount</varname>, in order to prohibit the unit's processes to undo the
1772 mappings. Specifically these are the options <varname>PrivateTmp=</varname>,
1773 <varname>PrivateDevices=</varname>, <varname>ProtectSystem=</varname>, <varname>ProtectHome=</varname>,
1774 <varname>ProtectKernelTunables=</varname>, <varname>ProtectControlGroups=</varname>,
1775 <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname>, <varname>InaccessiblePaths=</varname> and
1776 <varname>ReadWritePaths=</varname>.</para></listitem>
1777 </varlistentry>
1778
1779 <varlistentry>
1780 <term><varname>SystemCallErrorNumber=</varname></term>
1781
1782 <listitem><para>Takes an <literal>errno</literal> error number (between 1 and 4095) or errno name
1783 such as <constant>EPERM</constant>, <constant>EACCES</constant> or <constant>EUCLEAN</constant>, to
1784 return when the system call filter configured with <varname>SystemCallFilter=</varname> is triggered,
1785 instead of terminating the process immediately. See <citerefentry
1786 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>errno</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> for a
1787 full list of error codes. When this setting is not used, or when the empty string is assigned, the
1788 process will be terminated immediately when the filter is triggered.</para></listitem>
1789 </varlistentry>
1790
1791 <varlistentry>
1792 <term><varname>SystemCallArchitectures=</varname></term>
1793
1794 <listitem><para>Takes a space-separated list of architecture identifiers to include in the system call
1795 filter. The known architecture identifiers are the same as for <varname>ConditionArchitecture=</varname>
1796 described in <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1797 as well as <constant>x32</constant>, <constant>mips64-n32</constant>, <constant>mips64-le-n32</constant>, and
1798 the special identifier <constant>native</constant>. The special identifier <constant>native</constant>
1799 implicitly maps to the native architecture of the system (or more precisely: to the architecture the system
1800 manager is compiled for). If running in user mode, or in system mode, but without the
1801 <constant>CAP_SYS_ADMIN</constant> capability (e.g. setting <varname>User=nobody</varname>),
1802 <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> is implied. By default, this option is set to the empty list, i.e. no
1803 system call architecture filtering is applied.</para>
1804
1805 <para>If this setting is used, processes of this unit will only be permitted to call native system calls, and
1806 system calls of the specified architectures. For the purposes of this option, the x32 architecture is treated
1807 as including x86-64 system calls. However, this setting still fulfills its purpose, as explained below, on
1808 x32.</para>
1809
1810 <para>System call filtering is not equally effective on all architectures. For example, on x86
1811 filtering of network socket-related calls is not possible, due to ABI limitations — a limitation that x86-64
1812 does not have, however. On systems supporting multiple ABIs at the same time — such as x86/x86-64 — it is hence
1813 recommended to limit the set of permitted system call architectures so that secondary ABIs may not be used to
1814 circumvent the restrictions applied to the native ABI of the system. In particular, setting
1815 <varname>SystemCallArchitectures=native</varname> is a good choice for disabling non-native ABIs.</para>
1816
1817 <para>System call architectures may also be restricted system-wide via the
1818 <varname>SystemCallArchitectures=</varname> option in the global configuration. See
1819 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
1820 details.</para></listitem>
1821 </varlistentry>
1822
1823 </variablelist>
1824 </refsect1>
1825
1826 <refsect1>
1827 <title>Environment</title>
1828
1829 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
1830
1831 <varlistentry>
1832 <term><varname>Environment=</varname></term>
1833
1834 <listitem><para>Sets environment variables for executed processes. Takes a space-separated list of variable
1835 assignments. This option may be specified more than once, in which case all listed variables will be set. If
1836 the same variable is set twice, the later setting will override the earlier setting. If the empty string is
1837 assigned to this option, the list of environment variables is reset, all prior assignments have no
1838 effect. Variable expansion is not performed inside the strings, however, specifier expansion is possible. The $
1839 character has no special meaning. If you need to assign a value containing spaces or the equals sign to a
1840 variable, use double quotes (") for the assignment.</para>
1841
1842 <para>Example:
1843 <programlisting>Environment="VAR1=word1 word2" VAR2=word3 "VAR3=$word 5 6"</programlisting>
1844 gives three variables <literal>VAR1</literal>,
1845 <literal>VAR2</literal>, <literal>VAR3</literal>
1846 with the values <literal>word1 word2</literal>,
1847 <literal>word3</literal>, <literal>$word 5 6</literal>.
1848 </para>
1849
1850 <para>
1851 See <citerefentry
1852 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>environ</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details
1853 about environment variables.</para>
1854
1855 <para>Note that environment variables are not suitable for passing secrets (such as passwords, key material, …)
1856 to service processes. Environment variables set for a unit are exposed to unprivileged clients via D-Bus IPC,
1857 and generally not understood as being data that requires protection. Moreover, environment variables are
1858 propagated down the process tree, including across security boundaries (such as setuid/setgid executables), and
1859 hence might leak to processes that should not have access to the secret data.</para></listitem>
1860 </varlistentry>
1861
1862 <varlistentry>
1863 <term><varname>EnvironmentFile=</varname></term>
1864
1865 <listitem><para>Similar to <varname>Environment=</varname> but reads the environment variables from a text
1866 file. The text file should contain new-line-separated variable assignments. Empty lines, lines without an
1867 <literal>=</literal> separator, or lines starting with ; or # will be ignored, which may be used for
1868 commenting. A line ending with a backslash will be concatenated with the following one, allowing multiline
1869 variable definitions. The parser strips leading and trailing whitespace from the values of assignments, unless
1870 you use double quotes (").</para>
1871
1872 <para>The argument passed should be an absolute filename or wildcard expression, optionally prefixed with
1873 <literal>-</literal>, which indicates that if the file does not exist, it will not be read and no error or
1874 warning message is logged. This option may be specified more than once in which case all specified files are
1875 read. If the empty string is assigned to this option, the list of file to read is reset, all prior assignments
1876 have no effect.</para>
1877
1878 <para>The files listed with this directive will be read shortly before the process is executed (more
1879 specifically, after all processes from a previous unit state terminated. This means you can generate these
1880 files in one unit state, and read it with this option in the next).</para>
1881
1882 <para>Settings from these files override settings made with <varname>Environment=</varname>. If the same
1883 variable is set twice from these files, the files will be read in the order they are specified and the later
1884 setting will override the earlier setting.</para></listitem>
1885 </varlistentry>
1886
1887 <varlistentry>
1888 <term><varname>PassEnvironment=</varname></term>
1889
1890 <listitem><para>Pass environment variables set for the system service manager to executed processes. Takes a
1891 space-separated list of variable names. This option may be specified more than once, in which case all listed
1892 variables will be passed. If the empty string is assigned to this option, the list of environment variables to
1893 pass is reset, all prior assignments have no effect. Variables specified that are not set for the system
1894 manager will not be passed and will be silently ignored. Note that this option is only relevant for the system
1895 service manager, as system services by default do not automatically inherit any environment variables set for
1896 the service manager itself. However, in case of the user service manager all environment variables are passed
1897 to the executed processes anyway, hence this option is without effect for the user service manager.</para>
1898
1899 <para>Variables set for invoked processes due to this setting are subject to being overridden by those
1900 configured with <varname>Environment=</varname> or <varname>EnvironmentFile=</varname>.</para>
1901
1902 <para>Example:
1903 <programlisting>PassEnvironment=VAR1 VAR2 VAR3</programlisting>
1904 passes three variables <literal>VAR1</literal>,
1905 <literal>VAR2</literal>, <literal>VAR3</literal>
1906 with the values set for those variables in PID1.</para>
1907
1908 <para>
1909 See <citerefentry
1910 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>environ</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details
1911 about environment variables.</para></listitem>
1912 </varlistentry>
1913
1914 <varlistentry>
1915 <term><varname>UnsetEnvironment=</varname></term>
1916
1917 <listitem><para>Explicitly unset environment variable assignments that would normally be passed from the
1918 service manager to invoked processes of this unit. Takes a space-separated list of variable names or variable
1919 assignments. This option may be specified more than once, in which case all listed variables/assignments will
1920 be unset. If the empty string is assigned to this option, the list of environment variables/assignments to
1921 unset is reset. If a variable assignment is specified (that is: a variable name, followed by
1922 <literal>=</literal>, followed by its value), then any environment variable matching this precise assignment is
1923 removed. If a variable name is specified (that is a variable name without any following <literal>=</literal> or
1924 value), then any assignment matching the variable name, regardless of its value is removed. Note that the
1925 effect of <varname>UnsetEnvironment=</varname> is applied as final step when the environment list passed to
1926 executed processes is compiled. That means it may undo assignments from any configuration source, including
1927 assignments made through <varname>Environment=</varname> or <varname>EnvironmentFile=</varname>, inherited from
1928 the system manager's global set of environment variables, inherited via <varname>PassEnvironment=</varname>,
1929 set by the service manager itself (such as <varname>$NOTIFY_SOCKET</varname> and such), or set by a PAM module
1930 (in case <varname>PAMName=</varname> is used).</para>
1931
1932 <para>
1933 See <citerefentry
1934 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>environ</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details
1935 about environment variables.</para></listitem>
1936 </varlistentry>
1937
1938 </variablelist>
1939 </refsect1>
1940
1941 <refsect1>
1942 <title>Logging and Standard Input/Output</title>
1943
1944 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
1945 <varlistentry>
1946
1947 <term><varname>StandardInput=</varname></term>
1948
1949 <listitem><para>Controls where file descriptor 0 (STDIN) of the executed processes is connected to. Takes one
1950 of <option>null</option>, <option>tty</option>, <option>tty-force</option>, <option>tty-fail</option>,
1951 <option>data</option>, <option>file:<replaceable>path</replaceable></option>, <option>socket</option> or
1952 <option>fd:<replaceable>name</replaceable></option>.</para>
1953
1954 <para>If <option>null</option> is selected, standard input will be connected to <filename>/dev/null</filename>,
1955 i.e. all read attempts by the process will result in immediate EOF.</para>
1956
1957 <para>If <option>tty</option> is selected, standard input is connected to a TTY (as configured by
1958 <varname>TTYPath=</varname>, see below) and the executed process becomes the controlling process of the
1959 terminal. If the terminal is already being controlled by another process, the executed process waits until the
1960 current controlling process releases the terminal.</para>
1961
1962 <para><option>tty-force</option> is similar to <option>tty</option>, but the executed process is forcefully and
1963 immediately made the controlling process of the terminal, potentially removing previous controlling processes
1964 from the terminal.</para>
1965
1966 <para><option>tty-fail</option> is similar to <option>tty</option>, but if the terminal already has a
1967 controlling process start-up of the executed process fails.</para>
1968
1969 <para>The <option>data</option> option may be used to configure arbitrary textual or binary data to pass via
1970 standard input to the executed process. The data to pass is configured via
1971 <varname>StandardInputText=</varname>/<varname>StandardInputData=</varname> (see below). Note that the actual
1972 file descriptor type passed (memory file, regular file, UNIX pipe, …) might depend on the kernel and available
1973 privileges. In any case, the file descriptor is read-only, and when read returns the specified data followed by
1974 EOF.</para>
1975
1976 <para>The <option>file:<replaceable>path</replaceable></option> option may be used to connect a specific file
1977 system object to standard input. An absolute path following the <literal>:</literal> character is expected,
1978 which may refer to a regular file, a FIFO or special file. If an <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> socket in the
1979 file system is specified, a stream socket is connected to it. The latter is useful for connecting standard
1980 input of processes to arbitrary system services.</para>
1981
1982 <para>The <option>socket</option> option is valid in socket-activated services only, and requires the relevant
1983 socket unit file (see
1984 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details)
1985 to have <varname>Accept=yes</varname> set, or to specify a single socket only. If this option is set, standard
1986 input will be connected to the socket the service was activated from, which is primarily useful for
1987 compatibility with daemons designed for use with the traditional <citerefentry
1988 project='freebsd'><refentrytitle>inetd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> socket activation
1989 daemon.</para>
1990
1991 <para>The <option>fd:<replaceable>name</replaceable></option> option connects standard input to a specific,
1992 named file descriptor provided by a socket unit. The name may be specified as part of this option, following a
1993 <literal>:</literal> character (e.g. <literal>fd:foobar</literal>). If no name is specified, the name
1994 <literal>stdin</literal> is implied (i.e. <literal>fd</literal> is equivalent to <literal>fd:stdin</literal>).
1995 At least one socket unit defining the specified name must be provided via the <varname>Sockets=</varname>
1996 option, and the file descriptor name may differ from the name of its containing socket unit. If multiple
1997 matches are found, the first one will be used. See <varname>FileDescriptorName=</varname> in
1998 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for more
1999 details about named file descriptors and their ordering.</para>
2000
2001 <para>This setting defaults to <option>null</option>.</para>
2002
2003 <para>Note that services which specify <option>DefaultDependencies=no</option> and use
2004 <varname>StandardInput=</varname> or <varname>StandardOutput=</varname> with
2005 <option>tty</option>/<option>tty-force</option>/<option>tty-fail</option>, should specify
2006 <option>After=systemd-vconsole-setup.service</option>, to make sure that the tty initialization is
2007 finished before they start.</para></listitem>
2008 </varlistentry>
2009
2010 <varlistentry>
2011 <term><varname>StandardOutput=</varname></term>
2012
2013 <listitem><para>Controls where file descriptor 1 (STDOUT) of the executed processes is connected
2014 to. Takes one of <option>inherit</option>, <option>null</option>, <option>tty</option>,
2015 <option>journal</option>, <option>kmsg</option>, <option>journal+console</option>,
2016 <option>kmsg+console</option>, <option>file:<replaceable>path</replaceable></option>,
2017 <option>append:<replaceable>path</replaceable></option>, <option>socket</option> or
2018 <option>fd:<replaceable>name</replaceable></option>.</para>
2019
2020 <para><option>inherit</option> duplicates the file descriptor of standard input for standard output.</para>
2021
2022 <para><option>null</option> connects standard output to <filename>/dev/null</filename>, i.e. everything written
2023 to it will be lost.</para>
2024
2025 <para><option>tty</option> connects standard output to a tty (as configured via <varname>TTYPath=</varname>,
2026 see below). If the TTY is used for output only, the executed process will not become the controlling process of
2027 the terminal, and will not fail or wait for other processes to release the terminal.</para>
2028
2029 <para><option>journal</option> connects standard output with the journal, which is accessible via
2030 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>journalctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>. Note
2031 that everything that is written to kmsg (see below) is implicitly stored in the journal as well, the
2032 specific option listed below is hence a superset of this one. (Also note that any external,
2033 additional syslog daemons receive their log data from the journal, too, hence this is the option to
2034 use when logging shall be processed with such a daemon.)</para>
2035
2036 <para><option>kmsg</option> connects standard output with the kernel log buffer which is accessible via
2037 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>dmesg</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
2038 in addition to the journal. The journal daemon might be configured to send all logs to kmsg anyway, in which
2039 case this option is no different from <option>journal</option>.</para>
2040
2041 <para><option>journal+console</option> and <option>kmsg+console</option> work in a similar way as the
2042 two options above but copy the output to the system console as well.</para>
2043
2044 <para>The <option>file:<replaceable>path</replaceable></option> option may be used to connect a specific file
2045 system object to standard output. The semantics are similar to the same option of
2046 <varname>StandardInput=</varname>, see above. If <replaceable>path</replaceable> refers to a regular file
2047 on the filesystem, it is opened (created if it doesn't exist yet) for writing at the beginning of the file,
2048 but without truncating it.
2049 If standard input and output are directed to the same file path, it is opened only once, for reading as well
2050 as writing and duplicated. This is particularly useful when the specified path refers to an
2051 <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> socket in the file system, as in that case only a
2052 single stream connection is created for both input and output.</para>
2053
2054 <para><option>append:<replaceable>path</replaceable></option> is similar to <option>file:<replaceable>path
2055 </replaceable></option> above, but it opens the file in append mode.</para>
2056
2057 <para><option>socket</option> connects standard output to a socket acquired via socket activation. The
2058 semantics are similar to the same option of <varname>StandardInput=</varname>, see above.</para>
2059
2060 <para>The <option>fd:<replaceable>name</replaceable></option> option connects standard output to a specific,
2061 named file descriptor provided by a socket unit. A name may be specified as part of this option, following a
2062 <literal>:</literal> character (e.g. <literal>fd:foobar</literal>). If no name is specified, the name
2063 <literal>stdout</literal> is implied (i.e. <literal>fd</literal> is equivalent to
2064 <literal>fd:stdout</literal>). At least one socket unit defining the specified name must be provided via the
2065 <varname>Sockets=</varname> option, and the file descriptor name may differ from the name of its containing
2066 socket unit. If multiple matches are found, the first one will be used. See
2067 <varname>FileDescriptorName=</varname> in
2068 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for more
2069 details about named descriptors and their ordering.</para>
2070
2071 <para>If the standard output (or error output, see below) of a unit is connected to the journal or
2072 the kernel log buffer, the unit will implicitly gain a dependency of type <varname>After=</varname>
2073 on <filename>systemd-journald.socket</filename> (also see the "Implicit Dependencies" section
2074 above). Also note that in this case stdout (or stderr, see below) will be an
2075 <constant>AF_UNIX</constant> stream socket, and not a pipe or FIFO that can be re-opened. This means
2076 when executing shell scripts the construct <command>echo "hello" &gt; /dev/stderr</command> for
2077 writing text to stderr will not work. To mitigate this use the construct <command>echo "hello"
2078 >&amp;2</command> instead, which is mostly equivalent and avoids this pitfall.</para>
2079
2080 <para>This setting defaults to the value set with <varname>DefaultStandardOutput=</varname> in
2081 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, which
2082 defaults to <option>journal</option>. Note that setting this parameter might result in additional dependencies
2083 to be added to the unit (see above).</para></listitem>
2084 </varlistentry>
2085
2086 <varlistentry>
2087 <term><varname>StandardError=</varname></term>
2088
2089 <listitem><para>Controls where file descriptor 2 (STDERR) of the executed processes is connected to. The
2090 available options are identical to those of <varname>StandardOutput=</varname>, with some exceptions: if set to
2091 <option>inherit</option> the file descriptor used for standard output is duplicated for standard error, while
2092 <option>fd:<replaceable>name</replaceable></option> will use a default file descriptor name of
2093 <literal>stderr</literal>.</para>
2094
2095 <para>This setting defaults to the value set with <varname>DefaultStandardError=</varname> in
2096 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, which
2097 defaults to <option>inherit</option>. Note that setting this parameter might result in additional dependencies
2098 to be added to the unit (see above).</para></listitem>
2099 </varlistentry>
2100
2101 <varlistentry>
2102 <term><varname>StandardInputText=</varname></term>
2103 <term><varname>StandardInputData=</varname></term>
2104
2105 <listitem><para>Configures arbitrary textual or binary data to pass via file descriptor 0 (STDIN) to the
2106 executed processes. These settings have no effect unless <varname>StandardInput=</varname> is set to
2107 <option>data</option>. Use this option to embed process input data directly in the unit file.</para>
2108
2109 <para><varname>StandardInputText=</varname> accepts arbitrary textual data. C-style escapes for special
2110 characters as well as the usual <literal>%</literal>-specifiers are resolved. Each time this setting is used
2111 the specified text is appended to the per-unit data buffer, followed by a newline character (thus every use
2112 appends a new line to the end of the buffer). Note that leading and trailing whitespace of lines configured
2113 with this option is removed. If an empty line is specified the buffer is cleared (hence, in order to insert an
2114 empty line, add an additional <literal>\n</literal> to the end or beginning of a line).</para>
2115
2116 <para><varname>StandardInputData=</varname> accepts arbitrary binary data, encoded in <ulink
2117 url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2045#section-6.8">Base64</ulink>. No escape sequences or specifiers are
2118 resolved. Any whitespace in the encoded version is ignored during decoding.</para>
2119
2120 <para>Note that <varname>StandardInputText=</varname> and <varname>StandardInputData=</varname> operate on the
2121 same data buffer, and may be mixed in order to configure both binary and textual data for the same input
2122 stream. The textual or binary data is joined strictly in the order the settings appear in the unit
2123 file. Assigning an empty string to either will reset the data buffer.</para>
2124
2125 <para>Please keep in mind that in order to maintain readability long unit file settings may be split into
2126 multiple lines, by suffixing each line (except for the last) with a <literal>\</literal> character (see
2127 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
2128 details). This is particularly useful for large data configured with these two options. Example:</para>
2129
2130 <programlisting>…
2131 StandardInput=data
2132 StandardInputData=SWNrIHNpdHplIGRhIHVuJyBlc3NlIEtsb3BzLAp1ZmYgZWVtYWwga2xvcHAncy4KSWNrIGtpZWtl \
2133 LCBzdGF1bmUsIHd1bmRyZSBtaXIsCnVmZiBlZW1hbCBqZWh0IHNlIHVmZiBkaWUgVMO8ci4KTmFu \
2134 dSwgZGVuayBpY2ssIGljayBkZW5rIG5hbnUhCkpldHogaXNzZSB1ZmYsIGVyc2NodCB3YXIgc2Ug \
2135 enUhCkljayBqZWhlIHJhdXMgdW5kIGJsaWNrZSDigJQKdW5kIHdlciBzdGVodCBkcmF1w59lbj8g \
2136 SWNrZSEK
2137 …</programlisting></listitem>
2138 </varlistentry>
2139
2140 <varlistentry>
2141 <term><varname>LogLevelMax=</varname></term>
2142
2143 <listitem><para>Configures filtering by log level of log messages generated by this unit. Takes a
2144 <command>syslog</command> log level, one of <option>emerg</option> (lowest log level, only highest priority
2145 messages), <option>alert</option>, <option>crit</option>, <option>err</option>, <option>warning</option>,
2146 <option>notice</option>, <option>info</option>, <option>debug</option> (highest log level, also lowest priority
2147 messages). See <citerefentry
2148 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>syslog</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
2149 details. By default no filtering is applied (i.e. the default maximum log level is <option>debug</option>). Use
2150 this option to configure the logging system to drop log messages of a specific service above the specified
2151 level. For example, set <varname>LogLevelMax=</varname><option>info</option> in order to turn off debug logging
2152 of a particularly chatty unit. Note that the configured level is applied to any log messages written by any
2153 of the processes belonging to this unit, sent via any supported logging protocol. The filtering is applied
2154 early in the logging pipeline, before any kind of further processing is done. Moreover, messages which pass
2155 through this filter successfully might still be dropped by filters applied at a later stage in the logging
2156 subsystem. For example, <varname>MaxLevelStore=</varname> configured in
2157 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>journald.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> might
2158 prohibit messages of higher log levels to be stored on disk, even though the per-unit
2159 <varname>LogLevelMax=</varname> permitted it to be processed.</para></listitem>
2160 </varlistentry>
2161
2162 <varlistentry>
2163 <term><varname>LogExtraFields=</varname></term>
2164
2165 <listitem><para>Configures additional log metadata fields to include in all log records generated by
2166 processes associated with this unit. This setting takes one or more journal field assignments in the
2167 format <literal>FIELD=VALUE</literal> separated by whitespace. See
2168 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.journal-fields</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
2169 for details on the journal field concept. Even though the underlying journal implementation permits
2170 binary field values, this setting accepts only valid UTF-8 values. To include space characters in a
2171 journal field value, enclose the assignment in double quotes ("). <!-- " fake closing quote for emacs-->
2172 The usual specifiers are expanded in all assignments (see below). Note that this setting is not only
2173 useful for attaching additional metadata to log records of a unit, but given that all fields and
2174 values are indexed may also be used to implement cross-unit log record matching. Assign an empty
2175 string to reset the list.</para></listitem>
2176 </varlistentry>
2177
2178 <varlistentry>
2179 <term><varname>LogRateLimitIntervalSec=</varname></term>
2180 <term><varname>LogRateLimitBurst=</varname></term>
2181
2182 <listitem><para>Configures the rate limiting that is applied to messages generated by this unit. If, in the
2183 time interval defined by <varname>LogRateLimitIntervalSec=</varname>, more messages than specified in
2184 <varname>LogRateLimitBurst=</varname> are logged by a service, all further messages within the interval are
2185 dropped until the interval is over. A message about the number of dropped messages is generated. The time
2186 specification for <varname>LogRateLimitIntervalSec=</varname> may be specified in the following units: "s",
2187 "min", "h", "ms", "us" (see
2188 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details).
2189 The default settings are set by <varname>RateLimitIntervalSec=</varname> and <varname>RateLimitBurst=</varname>
2190 configured in <citerefentry><refentrytitle>journald.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2191 </para></listitem>
2192 </varlistentry>
2193
2194 <varlistentry>
2195 <term><varname>SyslogIdentifier=</varname></term>
2196
2197 <listitem><para>Sets the process name ("<command>syslog</command> tag") to prefix log lines sent to
2198 the logging system or the kernel log buffer with. If not set, defaults to the process name of the
2199 executed process. This option is only useful when <varname>StandardOutput=</varname> or
2200 <varname>StandardError=</varname> are set to <option>journal</option> or <option>kmsg</option> (or to
2201 the same settings in combination with <option>+console</option>) and only applies to log messages
2202 written to stdout or stderr.</para></listitem>
2203 </varlistentry>
2204
2205 <varlistentry>
2206 <term><varname>SyslogFacility=</varname></term>
2207
2208 <listitem><para>Sets the <command>syslog</command> facility identifier to use when logging. One of
2209 <option>kern</option>, <option>user</option>, <option>mail</option>, <option>daemon</option>,
2210 <option>auth</option>, <option>syslog</option>, <option>lpr</option>, <option>news</option>,
2211 <option>uucp</option>, <option>cron</option>, <option>authpriv</option>, <option>ftp</option>,
2212 <option>local0</option>, <option>local1</option>, <option>local2</option>, <option>local3</option>,
2213 <option>local4</option>, <option>local5</option>, <option>local6</option> or
2214 <option>local7</option>. See <citerefentry
2215 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>syslog</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
2216 details. This option is only useful when <varname>StandardOutput=</varname> or
2217 <varname>StandardError=</varname> are set to <option>journal</option> or <option>kmsg</option> (or to
2218 the same settings in combination with <option>+console</option>), and only applies to log messages
2219 written to stdout or stderr. Defaults to <option>daemon</option>.</para></listitem>
2220 </varlistentry>
2221
2222 <varlistentry>
2223 <term><varname>SyslogLevel=</varname></term>
2224
2225 <listitem><para>The default <command>syslog</command> log level to use when logging to the logging system or
2226 the kernel log buffer. One of <option>emerg</option>, <option>alert</option>, <option>crit</option>,
2227 <option>err</option>, <option>warning</option>, <option>notice</option>, <option>info</option>,
2228 <option>debug</option>. See <citerefentry
2229 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>syslog</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> for
2230 details. This option is only useful when <varname>StandardOutput=</varname> or
2231 <varname>StandardError=</varname> are set to <option>journal</option> or
2232 <option>kmsg</option> (or to the same settings in combination with <option>+console</option>), and only applies
2233 to log messages written to stdout or stderr. Note that individual lines output by executed processes may be
2234 prefixed with a different log level which can be used to override the default log level specified here. The
2235 interpretation of these prefixes may be disabled with <varname>SyslogLevelPrefix=</varname>, see below. For
2236 details, see <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sd-daemon</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2237 Defaults to <option>info</option>.</para></listitem>
2238 </varlistentry>
2239
2240 <varlistentry>
2241 <term><varname>SyslogLevelPrefix=</varname></term>
2242
2243 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true and <varname>StandardOutput=</varname> or
2244 <varname>StandardError=</varname> are set to <option>journal</option> or <option>kmsg</option> (or to
2245 the same settings in combination with <option>+console</option>), log lines written by the executed
2246 process that are prefixed with a log level will be processed with this log level set but the prefix
2247 removed. If set to false, the interpretation of these prefixes is disabled and the logged lines are
2248 passed on as-is. This only applies to log messages written to stdout or stderr. For details about
2249 this prefixing see
2250 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sd-daemon</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2251 Defaults to true.</para></listitem>
2252 </varlistentry>
2253
2254 <varlistentry>
2255 <term><varname>TTYPath=</varname></term>
2256
2257 <listitem><para>Sets the terminal device node to use if standard input, output, or error are connected to a TTY
2258 (see above). Defaults to <filename>/dev/console</filename>.</para></listitem>
2259 </varlistentry>
2260
2261 <varlistentry>
2262 <term><varname>TTYReset=</varname></term>
2263
2264 <listitem><para>Reset the terminal device specified with <varname>TTYPath=</varname> before and after
2265 execution. Defaults to <literal>no</literal>.</para></listitem>
2266 </varlistentry>
2267
2268 <varlistentry>
2269 <term><varname>TTYVHangup=</varname></term>
2270
2271 <listitem><para>Disconnect all clients which have opened the terminal device specified with
2272 <varname>TTYPath=</varname> before and after execution. Defaults to <literal>no</literal>.</para></listitem>
2273 </varlistentry>
2274
2275 <varlistentry>
2276 <term><varname>TTYVTDisallocate=</varname></term>
2277
2278 <listitem><para>If the terminal device specified with <varname>TTYPath=</varname> is a virtual console
2279 terminal, try to deallocate the TTY before and after execution. This ensures that the screen and scrollback
2280 buffer is cleared. Defaults to <literal>no</literal>.</para></listitem>
2281 </varlistentry>
2282 </variablelist>
2283 </refsect1>
2284
2285 <refsect1>
2286 <title>System V Compatibility</title>
2287 <variablelist class='unit-directives'>
2288
2289 <varlistentry>
2290 <term><varname>UtmpIdentifier=</varname></term>
2291
2292 <listitem><para>Takes a four character identifier string for an <citerefentry
2293 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>utmp</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> and wtmp entry
2294 for this service. This should only be set for services such as <command>getty</command> implementations (such
2295 as <citerefentry
2296 project='die-net'><refentrytitle>agetty</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>) where utmp/wtmp
2297 entries must be created and cleared before and after execution, or for services that shall be executed as if
2298 they were run by a <command>getty</command> process (see below). If the configured string is longer than four
2299 characters, it is truncated and the terminal four characters are used. This setting interprets %I style string
2300 replacements. This setting is unset by default, i.e. no utmp/wtmp entries are created or cleaned up for this
2301 service.</para></listitem>
2302 </varlistentry>
2303
2304 <varlistentry>
2305 <term><varname>UtmpMode=</varname></term>
2306
2307 <listitem><para>Takes one of <literal>init</literal>, <literal>login</literal> or <literal>user</literal>. If
2308 <varname>UtmpIdentifier=</varname> is set, controls which type of <citerefentry
2309 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>utmp</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>/wtmp entries
2310 for this service are generated. This setting has no effect unless <varname>UtmpIdentifier=</varname> is set
2311 too. If <literal>init</literal> is set, only an <constant>INIT_PROCESS</constant> entry is generated and the
2312 invoked process must implement a <command>getty</command>-compatible utmp/wtmp logic. If
2313 <literal>login</literal> is set, first an <constant>INIT_PROCESS</constant> entry, followed by a
2314 <constant>LOGIN_PROCESS</constant> entry is generated. In this case, the invoked process must implement a
2315 <citerefentry
2316 project='die-net'><refentrytitle>login</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>-compatible
2317 utmp/wtmp logic. If <literal>user</literal> is set, first an <constant>INIT_PROCESS</constant> entry, then a
2318 <constant>LOGIN_PROCESS</constant> entry and finally a <constant>USER_PROCESS</constant> entry is
2319 generated. In this case, the invoked process may be any process that is suitable to be run as session
2320 leader. Defaults to <literal>init</literal>.</para></listitem>
2321 </varlistentry>
2322
2323 </variablelist>
2324 </refsect1>
2325
2326 <refsect1>
2327 <title>Environment variables in spawned processes</title>
2328
2329 <para>Processes started by the service manager are executed with an environment variable block assembled from
2330 multiple sources. Processes started by the system service manager generally do not inherit environment variables
2331 set for the service manager itself (but this may be altered via <varname>PassEnvironment=</varname>), but processes
2332 started by the user service manager instances generally do inherit all environment variables set for the service
2333 manager itself.</para>
2334
2335 <para>For each invoked process the list of environment variables set is compiled from the following sources:</para>
2336
2337 <itemizedlist>
2338 <listitem><para>Variables globally configured for the service manager, using the
2339 <varname>DefaultEnvironment=</varname> setting in
2340 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, the kernel command line option <varname>systemd.setenv=</varname> (see
2341 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>) or via
2342 <command>systemctl set-environment</command> (see <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>).</para></listitem>
2343
2344 <listitem><para>Variables defined by the service manager itself (see the list below)</para></listitem>
2345
2346 <listitem><para>Variables set in the service manager's own environment variable block (subject to <varname>PassEnvironment=</varname> for the system service manager)</para></listitem>
2347
2348 <listitem><para>Variables set via <varname>Environment=</varname> in the unit file</para></listitem>
2349
2350 <listitem><para>Variables read from files specified via <varname>EnvironmentFile=</varname> in the unit file</para></listitem>
2351
2352 <listitem><para>Variables set by any PAM modules in case <varname>PAMName=</varname> is in effect,
2353 cf. <citerefentry
2354 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>pam_env</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry></para></listitem>
2355 </itemizedlist>
2356
2357 <para>If the same environment variables are set by multiple of these sources, the later source — according to the
2358 order of the list above — wins. Note that as final step all variables listed in
2359 <varname>UnsetEnvironment=</varname> are removed again from the compiled environment variable list, immediately
2360 before it is passed to the executed process.</para>
2361
2362 <para>The following select environment variables are set or propagated by the service manager for each invoked
2363 process:</para>
2364
2365 <variablelist class='environment-variables'>
2366 <varlistentry>
2367 <term><varname>$PATH</varname></term>
2368
2369 <listitem><para>Colon-separated list of directories to use when launching
2370 executables. <command>systemd</command> uses a fixed value of
2371 <literal><filename>/usr/local/sbin</filename>:<filename>/usr/local/bin</filename>:<filename>/usr/sbin</filename>:<filename>/usr/bin</filename></literal>
2372 in the system manager. When compiled for systems with "unmerged /usr" (<filename>/bin</filename> is
2373 not a symlink to <filename>/usr/bin</filename>),
2374 <literal>:<filename>/sbin</filename>:<filename>/bin</filename></literal> is appended. In case of the
2375 the user manager, each <filename>bin/</filename> and <filename>sbin/</filename> pair is switched, so
2376 that programs from <filename>/usr/bin</filename> have higher priority than programs from
2377 <filename>/usr/sbin</filename>, etc. It is recommended to not rely on this in any way, and have only
2378 one program with a given name in <varname>$PATH</varname>.</para></listitem>
2379 </varlistentry>
2380
2381 <varlistentry>
2382 <term><varname>$LANG</varname></term>
2383
2384 <listitem><para>Locale. Can be set in
2385 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>locale.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
2386 or on the kernel command line (see
2387 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
2388 and
2389 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>kernel-command-line</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>).
2390 </para></listitem>
2391 </varlistentry>
2392
2393 <varlistentry>
2394 <term><varname>$USER</varname></term>
2395 <term><varname>$LOGNAME</varname></term>
2396 <term><varname>$HOME</varname></term>
2397 <term><varname>$SHELL</varname></term>
2398
2399 <listitem><para>User name (twice), home directory, and the
2400 login shell. The variables are set for the units that have
2401 <varname>User=</varname> set, which includes user
2402 <command>systemd</command> instances. See
2403 <citerefentry project='die-net'><refentrytitle>passwd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2404 </para></listitem>
2405 </varlistentry>
2406
2407 <varlistentry>
2408 <term><varname>$INVOCATION_ID</varname></term>
2409
2410 <listitem><para>Contains a randomized, unique 128bit ID identifying each runtime cycle of the unit, formatted
2411 as 32 character hexadecimal string. A new ID is assigned each time the unit changes from an inactive state into
2412 an activating or active state, and may be used to identify this specific runtime cycle, in particular in data
2413 stored offline, such as the journal. The same ID is passed to all processes run as part of the
2414 unit.</para></listitem>
2415 </varlistentry>
2416
2417 <varlistentry>
2418 <term><varname>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR</varname></term>
2419
2420 <listitem><para>The directory to use for runtime objects (such as IPC objects) and volatile state. Set for all
2421 services run by the user <command>systemd</command> instance, as well as any system services that use
2422 <varname>PAMName=</varname> with a PAM stack that includes <command>pam_systemd</command>. See below and
2423 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>pam_systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> for more
2424 information.</para></listitem>
2425 </varlistentry>
2426
2427 <varlistentry>
2428 <term><varname>$MAINPID</varname></term>
2429
2430 <listitem><para>The PID of the unit's main process if it is
2431 known. This is only set for control processes as invoked by
2432 <varname>ExecReload=</varname> and similar. </para></listitem>
2433 </varlistentry>
2434
2435 <varlistentry>
2436 <term><varname>$MANAGERPID</varname></term>
2437
2438 <listitem><para>The PID of the user <command>systemd</command>
2439 instance, set for processes spawned by it. </para></listitem>
2440 </varlistentry>
2441
2442 <varlistentry>
2443 <term><varname>$LISTEN_FDS</varname></term>
2444 <term><varname>$LISTEN_PID</varname></term>
2445 <term><varname>$LISTEN_FDNAMES</varname></term>
2446
2447 <listitem><para>Information about file descriptors passed to a
2448 service for socket activation. See
2449 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sd_listen_fds</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2450 </para></listitem>
2451 </varlistentry>
2452
2453 <varlistentry>
2454 <term><varname>$NOTIFY_SOCKET</varname></term>
2455
2456 <listitem><para>The socket
2457 <function>sd_notify()</function> talks to. See
2458 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sd_notify</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2459 </para></listitem>
2460 </varlistentry>
2461
2462 <varlistentry>
2463 <term><varname>$WATCHDOG_PID</varname></term>
2464 <term><varname>$WATCHDOG_USEC</varname></term>
2465
2466 <listitem><para>Information about watchdog keep-alive notifications. See
2467 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sd_watchdog_enabled</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2468 </para></listitem>
2469 </varlistentry>
2470
2471 <varlistentry>
2472 <term><varname>$TERM</varname></term>
2473
2474 <listitem><para>Terminal type, set only for units connected to
2475 a terminal (<varname>StandardInput=tty</varname>,
2476 <varname>StandardOutput=tty</varname>, or
2477 <varname>StandardError=tty</varname>). See
2478 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>termcap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
2479 </para></listitem>
2480 </varlistentry>
2481
2482 <varlistentry>
2483 <term><varname>$JOURNAL_STREAM</varname></term>
2484
2485 <listitem><para>If the standard output or standard error output of the executed processes are connected to the
2486 journal (for example, by setting <varname>StandardError=journal</varname>) <varname>$JOURNAL_STREAM</varname>
2487 contains the device and inode numbers of the connection file descriptor, formatted in decimal, separated by a
2488 colon (<literal>:</literal>). This permits invoked processes to safely detect whether their standard output or
2489 standard error output are connected to the journal. The device and inode numbers of the file descriptors should
2490 be compared with the values set in the environment variable to determine whether the process output is still
2491 connected to the journal. Note that it is generally not sufficient to only check whether
2492 <varname>$JOURNAL_STREAM</varname> is set at all as services might invoke external processes replacing their
2493 standard output or standard error output, without unsetting the environment variable.</para>
2494
2495 <para>If both standard output and standard error of the executed processes are connected to the journal via a
2496 stream socket, this environment variable will contain information about the standard error stream, as that's
2497 usually the preferred destination for log data. (Note that typically the same stream is used for both standard
2498 output and standard error, hence very likely the environment variable contains device and inode information
2499 matching both stream file descriptors.)</para>
2500
2501 <para>This environment variable is primarily useful to allow services to optionally upgrade their used log
2502 protocol to the native journal protocol (using
2503 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sd_journal_print</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry> and other
2504 functions) if their standard output or standard error output is connected to the journal anyway, thus enabling
2505 delivery of structured metadata along with logged messages.</para></listitem>
2506 </varlistentry>
2507
2508 <varlistentry>
2509 <term><varname>$SERVICE_RESULT</varname></term>
2510
2511 <listitem><para>Only defined for the service unit type, this environment variable is passed to all
2512 <varname>ExecStop=</varname> and <varname>ExecStopPost=</varname> processes, and encodes the service
2513 "result". Currently, the following values are defined:</para>
2514
2515 <table>
2516 <title>Defined <varname>$SERVICE_RESULT</varname> values</title>
2517 <tgroup cols='2'>
2518 <colspec colname='result'/>
2519 <colspec colname='meaning'/>
2520 <thead>
2521 <row>
2522 <entry>Value</entry>
2523 <entry>Meaning</entry>
2524 </row>
2525 </thead>
2526
2527 <tbody>
2528 <row>
2529 <entry><literal>success</literal></entry>
2530 <entry>The service ran successfully and exited cleanly.</entry>
2531 </row>
2532 <row>
2533 <entry><literal>protocol</literal></entry>
2534 <entry>A protocol violation occurred: the service did not take the steps required by its unit configuration (specifically what is configured in its <varname>Type=</varname> setting).</entry>
2535 </row>
2536 <row>
2537 <entry><literal>timeout</literal></entry>
2538 <entry>One of the steps timed out.</entry>
2539 </row>
2540 <row>
2541 <entry><literal>exit-code</literal></entry>
2542 <entry>Service process exited with a non-zero exit code; see <varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname> below for the actual exit code returned.</entry>
2543 </row>
2544 <row>
2545 <entry><literal>signal</literal></entry>
2546 <entry>A service process was terminated abnormally by a signal, without dumping core. See <varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname> below for the actual signal causing the termination.</entry>
2547 </row>
2548 <row>
2549 <entry><literal>core-dump</literal></entry>
2550 <entry>A service process terminated abnormally with a signal and dumped core. See <varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname> below for the signal causing the termination.</entry>
2551 </row>
2552 <row>
2553 <entry><literal>watchdog</literal></entry>
2554 <entry>Watchdog keep-alive ping was enabled for the service, but the deadline was missed.</entry>
2555 </row>
2556 <row>
2557 <entry><literal>start-limit-hit</literal></entry>
2558 <entry>A start limit was defined for the unit and it was hit, causing the unit to fail to start. See <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>'s <varname>StartLimitIntervalSec=</varname> and <varname>StartLimitBurst=</varname> for details.</entry>
2559 </row>
2560 <row>
2561 <entry><literal>resources</literal></entry>
2562 <entry>A catch-all condition in case a system operation failed.</entry>
2563 </row>
2564 </tbody>
2565 </tgroup>
2566 </table>
2567
2568 <para>This environment variable is useful to monitor failure or successful termination of a service. Even
2569 though this variable is available in both <varname>ExecStop=</varname> and <varname>ExecStopPost=</varname>, it
2570 is usually a better choice to place monitoring tools in the latter, as the former is only invoked for services
2571 that managed to start up correctly, and the latter covers both services that failed during their start-up and
2572 those which failed during their runtime.</para></listitem>
2573 </varlistentry>
2574
2575 <varlistentry>
2576 <term><varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname></term>
2577 <term><varname>$EXIT_STATUS</varname></term>
2578
2579 <listitem><para>Only defined for the service unit type, these environment variables are passed to all
2580 <varname>ExecStop=</varname>, <varname>ExecStopPost=</varname> processes and contain exit status/code
2581 information of the main process of the service. For the precise definition of the exit code and status, see
2582 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>wait</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>. <varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname>
2583 is one of <literal>exited</literal>, <literal>killed</literal>,
2584 <literal>dumped</literal>. <varname>$EXIT_STATUS</varname> contains the numeric exit code formatted as string
2585 if <varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname> is <literal>exited</literal>, and the signal name in all other cases. Note
2586 that these environment variables are only set if the service manager succeeded to start and identify the main
2587 process of the service.</para>
2588
2589 <table>
2590 <title>Summary of possible service result variable values</title>
2591 <tgroup cols='3'>
2592 <colspec colname='result' />
2593 <colspec colname='code' />
2594 <colspec colname='status' />
2595 <thead>
2596 <row>
2597 <entry><varname>$SERVICE_RESULT</varname></entry>
2598 <entry><varname>$EXIT_CODE</varname></entry>
2599 <entry><varname>$EXIT_STATUS</varname></entry>
2600 </row>
2601 </thead>
2602
2603 <tbody>
2604 <row>
2605 <entry morerows="1" valign="top"><literal>success</literal></entry>
2606 <entry valign="top"><literal>killed</literal></entry>
2607 <entry><literal>HUP</literal>, <literal>INT</literal>, <literal>TERM</literal>, <literal>PIPE</literal></entry>
2608 </row>
2609 <row>
2610 <entry valign="top"><literal>exited</literal></entry>
2611 <entry><literal>0</literal></entry>
2612 </row>
2613 <row>
2614 <entry morerows="1" valign="top"><literal>protocol</literal></entry>
2615 <entry valign="top">not set</entry>
2616 <entry>not set</entry>
2617 </row>
2618 <row>
2619 <entry><literal>exited</literal></entry>
2620 <entry><literal>0</literal></entry>
2621 </row>
2622 <row>
2623 <entry morerows="1" valign="top"><literal>timeout</literal></entry>
2624 <entry valign="top"><literal>killed</literal></entry>
2625 <entry><literal>TERM</literal>, <literal>KILL</literal></entry>
2626 </row>
2627 <row>
2628 <entry valign="top"><literal>exited</literal></entry>
2629 <entry><literal>0</literal>, <literal>1</literal>, <literal>2</literal>, <literal
2630 >3</literal>, …, <literal>255</literal></entry>
2631 </row>
2632 <row>
2633 <entry valign="top"><literal>exit-code</literal></entry>
2634 <entry valign="top"><literal>exited</literal></entry>
2635 <entry><literal>1</literal>, <literal>2</literal>, <literal
2636 >3</literal>, …, <literal>255</literal></entry>
2637 </row>
2638 <row>
2639 <entry valign="top"><literal>signal</literal></entry>
2640 <entry valign="top"><literal>killed</literal></entry>
2641 <entry><literal>HUP</literal>, <literal>INT</literal>, <literal>KILL</literal>, …</entry>
2642 </row>
2643 <row>
2644 <entry valign="top"><literal>core-dump</literal></entry>
2645 <entry valign="top"><literal>dumped</literal></entry>
2646 <entry><literal>ABRT</literal>, <literal>SEGV</literal>, <literal>QUIT</literal>, …</entry>
2647 </row>
2648 <row>
2649 <entry morerows="2" valign="top"><literal>watchdog</literal></entry>
2650 <entry><literal>dumped</literal></entry>
2651 <entry><literal>ABRT</literal></entry>
2652 </row>
2653 <row>
2654 <entry><literal>killed</literal></entry>
2655 <entry><literal>TERM</literal>, <literal>KILL</literal></entry>
2656 </row>
2657 <row>
2658 <entry><literal>exited</literal></entry>
2659 <entry><literal>0</literal>, <literal>1</literal>, <literal>2</literal>, <literal
2660 >3</literal>, …, <literal>255</literal></entry>
2661 </row>
2662 <row>
2663 <entry valign="top"><literal>exec-condition</literal></entry>
2664 <entry><literal>exited</literal></entry>
2665 <entry><literal>1</literal>, <literal>2</literal>, <literal>3</literal>, <literal
2666 >4</literal>, …, <literal>254</literal></entry>
2667 </row>
2668 <row>
2669 <entry valign="top"><literal>oom-kill</literal></entry>
2670 <entry valign="top"><literal>killed</literal></entry>
2671 <entry><literal>TERM</literal>, <literal>KILL</literal></entry>
2672 </row>
2673 <row>
2674 <entry><literal>start-limit-hit</literal></entry>
2675 <entry>not set</entry>
2676 <entry>not set</entry>
2677 </row>
2678 <row>
2679 <entry><literal>resources</literal></entry>
2680 <entry>any of the above</entry>
2681 <entry>any of the above</entry>
2682 </row>
2683 <row>
2684 <entry namest="results" nameend="status">Note: the process may be also terminated by a signal not sent by systemd. In particular the process may send an arbitrary signal to itself in a handler for any of the non-maskable signals. Nevertheless, in the <literal>timeout</literal> and <literal>watchdog</literal> rows above only the signals that systemd sends have been included. Moreover, using <varname>SuccessExitStatus=</varname> additional exit statuses may be declared to indicate clean termination, which is not reflected by this table.</entry>
2685 </row>
2686 </tbody>
2687 </tgroup>
2688 </table>
2689
2690 </listitem>
2691 </varlistentry>
2692
2693 <varlistentry>
2694 <term><varname>$PIDFILE</varname></term>
2695
2696 <listitem><para>The path to the configured PID file, in case the process is forked off on behalf of a
2697 service that uses the <varname>PIDFile=</varname> setting, see
2698 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
2699 for details. Service code may use this environment variable to automatically generate a PID file at
2700 the location configured in the unit file. This field is set to an absolute path in the file
2701 system.</para></listitem>
2702 </varlistentry>
2703
2704 </variablelist>
2705
2706 <para>For system services, when <varname>PAMName=</varname> is enabled and <command>pam_systemd</command> is part
2707 of the selected PAM stack, additional environment variables defined by systemd may be set for
2708 services. Specifically, these are <varname>$XDG_SEAT</varname>, <varname>$XDG_VTNR</varname>, see
2709 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>pam_systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details.</para>
2710 </refsect1>
2711
2712 <refsect1>
2713 <title>Process exit codes</title>
2714
2715 <para>When invoking a unit process the service manager possibly fails to apply the execution parameters configured
2716 with the settings above. In that case the already created service process will exit with a non-zero exit code
2717 before the configured command line is executed. (Or in other words, the child process possibly exits with these
2718 error codes, after having been created by the <citerefentry
2719 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>fork</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system call, but
2720 before the matching <citerefentry
2721 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>execve</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system call is
2722 called.) Specifically, exit codes defined by the C library, by the LSB specification and by the systemd service
2723 manager itself are used.</para>
2724
2725 <para>The following basic service exit codes are defined by the C library.</para>
2726
2727 <table>
2728 <title>Basic C library exit codes</title>
2729 <tgroup cols='3'>
2730 <thead>
2731 <row>
2732 <entry>Exit Code</entry>
2733 <entry>Symbolic Name</entry>
2734 <entry>Description</entry>
2735 </row>
2736 </thead>
2737 <tbody>
2738 <row>
2739 <entry>0</entry>
2740 <entry><constant>EXIT_SUCCESS</constant></entry>
2741 <entry>Generic success code.</entry>
2742 </row>
2743 <row>
2744 <entry>1</entry>
2745 <entry><constant>EXIT_FAILURE</constant></entry>
2746 <entry>Generic failure or unspecified error.</entry>
2747 </row>
2748 </tbody>
2749 </tgroup>
2750 </table>
2751
2752 <para>The following service exit codes are defined by the <ulink
2753 url="https://refspecs.linuxbase.org/LSB_5.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/iniscrptact.html">LSB specification</ulink>.
2754 </para>
2755
2756 <table>
2757 <title>LSB service exit codes</title>
2758 <tgroup cols='3'>
2759 <thead>
2760 <row>
2761 <entry>Exit Code</entry>
2762 <entry>Symbolic Name</entry>
2763 <entry>Description</entry>
2764 </row>
2765 </thead>
2766 <tbody>
2767 <row>
2768 <entry>2</entry>
2769 <entry><constant>EXIT_INVALIDARGUMENT</constant></entry>
2770 <entry>Invalid or excess arguments.</entry>
2771 </row>
2772 <row>
2773 <entry>3</entry>
2774 <entry><constant>EXIT_NOTIMPLEMENTED</constant></entry>
2775 <entry>Unimplemented feature.</entry>
2776 </row>
2777 <row>
2778 <entry>4</entry>
2779 <entry><constant>EXIT_NOPERMISSION</constant></entry>
2780 <entry>The user has insufficient privileges.</entry>
2781 </row>
2782 <row>
2783 <entry>5</entry>
2784 <entry><constant>EXIT_NOTINSTALLED</constant></entry>
2785 <entry>The program is not installed.</entry>
2786 </row>
2787 <row>
2788 <entry>6</entry>
2789 <entry><constant>EXIT_NOTCONFIGURED</constant></entry>
2790 <entry>The program is not configured.</entry>
2791 </row>
2792 <row>
2793 <entry>7</entry>
2794 <entry><constant>EXIT_NOTRUNNING</constant></entry>
2795 <entry>The program is not running.</entry>
2796 </row>
2797 </tbody>
2798 </tgroup>
2799 </table>
2800
2801 <para>
2802 The LSB specification suggests that error codes 200 and above are reserved for implementations. Some of them are
2803 used by the service manager to indicate problems during process invocation:
2804 </para>
2805 <table>
2806 <title>systemd-specific exit codes</title>
2807 <tgroup cols='3'>
2808 <thead>
2809 <row>
2810 <entry>Exit Code</entry>
2811 <entry>Symbolic Name</entry>
2812 <entry>Description</entry>
2813 </row>
2814 </thead>
2815 <tbody>
2816 <row>
2817 <entry>200</entry>
2818 <entry><constant>EXIT_CHDIR</constant></entry>
2819 <entry>Changing to the requested working directory failed. See <varname>WorkingDirectory=</varname> above.</entry>
2820 </row>
2821 <row>
2822 <entry>201</entry>
2823 <entry><constant>EXIT_NICE</constant></entry>
2824 <entry>Failed to set up process scheduling priority (nice level). See <varname>Nice=</varname> above.</entry>
2825 </row>
2826 <row>
2827 <entry>202</entry>
2828 <entry><constant>EXIT_FDS</constant></entry>
2829 <entry>Failed to close unwanted file descriptors, or to adjust passed file descriptors.</entry>
2830 </row>
2831 <row>
2832 <entry>203</entry>
2833 <entry><constant>EXIT_EXEC</constant></entry>
2834 <entry>The actual process execution failed (specifically, the <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>execve</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry> system call). Most likely this is caused by a missing or non-accessible executable file.</entry>
2835 </row>
2836 <row>
2837 <entry>204</entry>
2838 <entry><constant>EXIT_MEMORY</constant></entry>
2839 <entry>Failed to perform an action due to memory shortage.</entry>
2840 </row>
2841 <row>
2842 <entry>205</entry>
2843 <entry><constant>EXIT_LIMITS</constant></entry>
2844 <entry>Failed to adjust resource limits. See <varname>LimitCPU=</varname> and related settings above.</entry>
2845 </row>
2846 <row>
2847 <entry>206</entry>
2848 <entry><constant>EXIT_OOM_ADJUST</constant></entry>
2849 <entry>Failed to adjust the OOM setting. See <varname>OOMScoreAdjust=</varname> above.</entry>
2850 </row>
2851 <row>
2852 <entry>207</entry>
2853 <entry><constant>EXIT_SIGNAL_MASK</constant></entry>
2854 <entry>Failed to set process signal mask.</entry>
2855 </row>
2856 <row>
2857 <entry>208</entry>
2858 <entry><constant>EXIT_STDIN</constant></entry>
2859 <entry>Failed to set up standard input. See <varname>StandardInput=</varname> above.</entry>
2860 </row>
2861 <row>
2862 <entry>209</entry>
2863 <entry><constant>EXIT_STDOUT</constant></entry>
2864 <entry>Failed to set up standard output. See <varname>StandardOutput=</varname> above.</entry>
2865 </row>
2866 <row>
2867 <entry>210</entry>
2868 <entry><constant>EXIT_CHROOT</constant></entry>
2869 <entry>Failed to change root directory (<citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>chroot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>). See <varname>RootDirectory=</varname>/<varname>RootImage=</varname> above.</entry>
2870 </row>
2871 <row>
2872 <entry>211</entry>
2873 <entry><constant>EXIT_IOPRIO</constant></entry>
2874 <entry>Failed to set up IO scheduling priority. See <varname>IOSchedulingClass=</varname>/<varname>IOSchedulingPriority=</varname> above.</entry>
2875 </row>
2876 <row>
2877 <entry>212</entry>
2878 <entry><constant>EXIT_TIMERSLACK</constant></entry>
2879 <entry>Failed to set up timer slack. See <varname>TimerSlackNSec=</varname> above.</entry>
2880 </row>
2881 <row>
2882 <entry>213</entry>
2883 <entry><constant>EXIT_SECUREBITS</constant></entry>
2884 <entry>Failed to set process secure bits. See <varname>SecureBits=</varname> above.</entry>
2885 </row>
2886 <row>
2887 <entry>214</entry>
2888 <entry><constant>EXIT_SETSCHEDULER</constant></entry>
2889 <entry>Failed to set up CPU scheduling. See <varname>CPUSchedulingPolicy=</varname>/<varname>CPUSchedulingPriority=</varname> above.</entry>
2890 </row>
2891 <row>
2892 <entry>215</entry>
2893 <entry><constant>EXIT_CPUAFFINITY</constant></entry>
2894 <entry>Failed to set up CPU affinity. See <varname>CPUAffinity=</varname> above.</entry>
2895 </row>
2896 <row>
2897 <entry>216</entry>
2898 <entry><constant>EXIT_GROUP</constant></entry>
2899 <entry>Failed to determine or change group credentials. See <varname>Group=</varname>/<varname>SupplementaryGroups=</varname> above.</entry>
2900 </row>
2901 <row>
2902 <entry>217</entry>
2903 <entry><constant>EXIT_USER</constant></entry>
2904 <entry>Failed to determine or change user credentials, or to set up user namespacing. See <varname>User=</varname>/<varname>PrivateUsers=</varname> above.</entry>
2905 </row>
2906 <row>
2907 <entry>218</entry>
2908 <entry><constant>EXIT_CAPABILITIES</constant></entry>
2909 <entry>Failed to drop capabilities, or apply ambient capabilities. See <varname>CapabilityBoundingSet=</varname>/<varname>AmbientCapabilities=</varname> above.</entry>
2910 </row>
2911 <row>
2912 <entry>219</entry>
2913 <entry><constant>EXIT_CGROUP</constant></entry>
2914 <entry>Setting up the service control group failed.</entry>
2915 </row>
2916 <row>
2917 <entry>220</entry>
2918 <entry><constant>EXIT_SETSID</constant></entry>
2919 <entry>Failed to create new process session.</entry>
2920 </row>
2921 <row>
2922 <entry>221</entry>
2923 <entry><constant>EXIT_CONFIRM</constant></entry>
2924 <entry>Execution has been cancelled by the user. See the <varname>systemd.confirm_spawn=</varname> kernel command line setting on <citerefentry><refentrytitle>kernel-command-line</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> for details.</entry>
2925 </row>
2926 <row>
2927 <entry>222</entry>
2928 <entry><constant>EXIT_STDERR</constant></entry>
2929 <entry>Failed to set up standard error output. See <varname>StandardError=</varname> above.</entry>
2930 </row>
2931 <row>
2932 <entry>224</entry>
2933 <entry><constant>EXIT_PAM</constant></entry>
2934 <entry>Failed to set up PAM session. See <varname>PAMName=</varname> above.</entry>
2935 </row>
2936 <row>
2937 <entry>225</entry>
2938 <entry><constant>EXIT_NETWORK</constant></entry>
2939 <entry>Failed to set up network namespacing. See <varname>PrivateNetwork=</varname> above.</entry>
2940 </row>
2941 <row>
2942 <entry>226</entry>
2943 <entry><constant>EXIT_NAMESPACE</constant></entry>
2944 <entry>Failed to set up mount namespacing. See <varname>ReadOnlyPaths=</varname> and related settings above.</entry>
2945 </row>
2946 <row>
2947 <entry>227</entry>
2948 <entry><constant>EXIT_NO_NEW_PRIVILEGES</constant></entry>
2949 <entry>Failed to disable new privileges. See <varname>NoNewPrivileges=yes</varname> above.</entry>
2950 </row>
2951 <row>
2952 <entry>228</entry>
2953 <entry><constant>EXIT_SECCOMP</constant></entry>
2954 <entry>Failed to apply system call filters. See <varname>SystemCallFilter=</varname> and related settings above.</entry>
2955 </row>
2956 <row>
2957 <entry>229</entry>
2958 <entry><constant>EXIT_SELINUX_CONTEXT</constant></entry>
2959 <entry>Determining or changing SELinux context failed. See <varname>SELinuxContext=</varname> above.</entry>
2960 </row>
2961 <row>
2962 <entry>230</entry>
2963 <entry><constant>EXIT_PERSONALITY</constant></entry>
2964 <entry>Failed to set up an execution domain (personality). See <varname>Personality=</varname> above.</entry>
2965 </row>
2966 <row>
2967 <entry>231</entry>
2968 <entry><constant>EXIT_APPARMOR_PROFILE</constant></entry>
2969 <entry>Failed to prepare changing AppArmor profile. See <varname>AppArmorProfile=</varname> above.</entry>
2970 </row>
2971 <row>
2972 <entry>232</entry>
2973 <entry><constant>EXIT_ADDRESS_FAMILIES</constant></entry>
2974 <entry>Failed to restrict address families. See <varname>RestrictAddressFamilies=</varname> above.</entry>
2975 </row>
2976 <row>
2977 <entry>233</entry>
2978 <entry><constant>EXIT_RUNTIME_DIRECTORY</constant></entry>
2979 <entry>Setting up runtime directory failed. See <varname>RuntimeDirectory=</varname> and related settings above.</entry>
2980 </row>
2981 <row>
2982 <entry>235</entry>
2983 <entry><constant>EXIT_CHOWN</constant></entry>
2984 <entry>Failed to adjust socket ownership. Used for socket units only.</entry>
2985 </row>
2986 <row>
2987 <entry>236</entry>
2988 <entry><constant>EXIT_SMACK_PROCESS_LABEL</constant></entry>
2989 <entry>Failed to set SMACK label. See <varname>SmackProcessLabel=</varname> above.</entry>
2990 </row>
2991 <row>
2992 <entry>237</entry>
2993 <entry><constant>EXIT_KEYRING</constant></entry>
2994 <entry>Failed to set up kernel keyring.</entry>
2995 </row>
2996 <row>
2997 <entry>238</entry>
2998 <entry><constant>EXIT_STATE_DIRECTORY</constant></entry>
2999 <entry>Failed to set up unit's state directory. See <varname>StateDirectory=</varname> above.</entry>
3000 </row>
3001 <row>
3002 <entry>239</entry>
3003 <entry><constant>EXIT_CACHE_DIRECTORY</constant></entry>
3004 <entry>Failed to set up unit's cache directory. See <varname>CacheDirectory=</varname> above.</entry>
3005 </row>
3006 <row>
3007 <entry>240</entry>
3008 <entry><constant>EXIT_LOGS_DIRECTORY</constant></entry>
3009 <entry>Failed to set up unit's logging directory. See <varname>LogsDirectory=</varname> above.</entry>
3010 </row>
3011 <row>
3012 <entry>241</entry>
3013 <entry><constant>EXIT_CONFIGURATION_DIRECTORY</constant></entry>
3014 <entry>Failed to set up unit's configuration directory. See <varname>ConfigurationDirectory=</varname> above.</entry>
3015 </row>
3016 <row>
3017 <entry>242</entry>
3018 <entry><constant>EXIT_NUMA_POLICY</constant></entry>
3019 <entry>Failed to set up unit's NUMA memory policy. See <varname>NUMAPolicy=</varname> and <varname>NUMAMask=</varname>above.</entry>
3020 </row>
3021
3022 </tbody>
3023 </tgroup>
3024 </table>
3025
3026 <para>Finally, the BSD operating systems define a set of exit codes, typically defined on Linux systems too:</para>
3027
3028 <table>
3029 <title>BSD exit codes</title>
3030 <tgroup cols='3'>
3031 <thead>
3032 <row>
3033 <entry>Exit Code</entry>
3034 <entry>Symbolic Name</entry>
3035 <entry>Description</entry>
3036 </row>
3037 </thead>
3038 <tbody>
3039 <row>
3040 <entry>64</entry>
3041 <entry><constant>EX_USAGE</constant></entry>
3042 <entry>Command line usage error</entry>
3043 </row>
3044 <row>
3045 <entry>65</entry>
3046 <entry><constant>EX_DATAERR</constant></entry>
3047 <entry>Data format error</entry>
3048 </row>
3049 <row>
3050 <entry>66</entry>
3051 <entry><constant>EX_NOINPUT</constant></entry>
3052 <entry>Cannot open input</entry>
3053 </row>
3054 <row>
3055 <entry>67</entry>
3056 <entry><constant>EX_NOUSER</constant></entry>
3057 <entry>Addressee unknown</entry>
3058 </row>
3059 <row>
3060 <entry>68</entry>
3061 <entry><constant>EX_NOHOST</constant></entry>
3062 <entry>Host name unknown</entry>
3063 </row>
3064 <row>
3065 <entry>69</entry>
3066 <entry><constant>EX_UNAVAILABLE</constant></entry>
3067 <entry>Service unavailable</entry>
3068 </row>
3069 <row>
3070 <entry>70</entry>
3071 <entry><constant>EX_SOFTWARE</constant></entry>
3072 <entry>internal software error</entry>
3073 </row>
3074 <row>
3075 <entry>71</entry>
3076 <entry><constant>EX_OSERR</constant></entry>
3077 <entry>System error (e.g., can't fork)</entry>
3078 </row>
3079 <row>
3080 <entry>72</entry>
3081 <entry><constant>EX_OSFILE</constant></entry>
3082 <entry>Critical OS file missing</entry>
3083 </row>
3084 <row>
3085 <entry>73</entry>
3086 <entry><constant>EX_CANTCREAT</constant></entry>
3087 <entry>Can't create (user) output file</entry>
3088 </row>
3089 <row>
3090 <entry>74</entry>
3091 <entry><constant>EX_IOERR</constant></entry>
3092 <entry>Input/output error</entry>
3093 </row>
3094 <row>
3095 <entry>75</entry>
3096 <entry><constant>EX_TEMPFAIL</constant></entry>
3097 <entry>Temporary failure; user is invited to retry</entry>
3098 </row>
3099 <row>
3100 <entry>76</entry>
3101 <entry><constant>EX_PROTOCOL</constant></entry>
3102 <entry>Remote error in protocol</entry>
3103 </row>
3104 <row>
3105 <entry>77</entry>
3106 <entry><constant>EX_NOPERM</constant></entry>
3107 <entry>Permission denied</entry>
3108 </row>
3109 <row>
3110 <entry>78</entry>
3111 <entry><constant>EX_CONFIG</constant></entry>
3112 <entry>Configuration error</entry>
3113 </row>
3114 </tbody>
3115 </tgroup>
3116 </table>
3117 </refsect1>
3118
3119 <refsect1>
3120 <title>See Also</title>
3121 <para>
3122 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3123 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3124 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-analyze</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3125 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>journalctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3126 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-system.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3127 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3128 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3129 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3130 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.swap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3131 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3132 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.kill</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3133 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3134 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3135 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.directives</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3136 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>tmpfiles.d</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
3137 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>exec</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>
3138 </para>
3139 </refsect1>
3140
3141 </refentry>