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8 Copyright 2010 Lennart Poettering
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23
24 <refentry id="systemd.unit">
25
26 <refentryinfo>
27 <title>systemd.unit</title>
28 <productname>systemd</productname>
29
30 <authorgroup>
31 <author>
32 <contrib>Developer</contrib>
33 <firstname>Lennart</firstname>
34 <surname>Poettering</surname>
35 <email>lennart@poettering.net</email>
36 </author>
37 </authorgroup>
38 </refentryinfo>
39
40 <refmeta>
41 <refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle>
42 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
43 </refmeta>
44
45 <refnamediv>
46 <refname>systemd.unit</refname>
47 <refpurpose>Unit configuration</refpurpose>
48 </refnamediv>
49
50 <refsynopsisdiv>
51 <para><filename>systemd.service</filename>,
52 <filename>systemd.socket</filename>,
53 <filename>systemd.device</filename>,
54 <filename>systemd.mount</filename>,
55 <filename>systemd.automount</filename>,
56 <filename>systemd.swap</filename>,
57 <filename>systemd.target</filename>,
58 <filename>systemd.path</filename>,
59 <filename>systemd.timer</filename>,
60 <filename>systemd.snapshot</filename></para>
61 </refsynopsisdiv>
62
63 <refsect1>
64 <title>Description</title>
65
66 <para>A unit configuration file encodes information
67 about a service, a socket, a device, a mount point, an
68 automount point, a swap file or partition, a start-up
69 target, a file system path or a timer controlled and
70 supervised by
71 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>. The
72 syntax is inspired by <ulink
73 url="http://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/">XDG
74 Desktop Entry Specification</ulink> <filename>.desktop</filename> files, which are in turn
75 inspired by Microsoft Windows
76 <filename>.ini</filename> files.</para>
77
78 <para>This man pages lists the common configuration
79 options of all the unit types. These options need to
80 be configured in the [Unit] resp. [Install]
81 section of the unit files.</para>
82
83 <para>In addition to the generic [Unit] and [Install]
84 sections described here, each unit should have a
85 type-specific section, e.g. [Service] for a service
86 unit. See the respective man pages for more
87 information.</para>
88
89 <para>Unit files may contain additional options on top
90 of those listed here. If systemd encounters an unknown
91 option it will write a warning log message but
92 continue loading the unit. If an option is prefixed
93 with <option>X-</option> it is ignored completely by
94 systemd. Applications may use this to include
95 additional information in the unit files.</para>
96
97 <para>Boolean arguments used in unit files can be
98 written in various formats. For positive settings the
99 strings <option>1</option>, <option>yes</option>,
100 <option>true</option> and <option>on</option> are
101 equivalent. For negative settings the strings
102 <option>0</option>, <option>no</option>,
103 <option>false</option> and <option>off</option> are
104 equivalent.</para>
105
106 <para>Time span values encoded in unit files can be
107 written in various formats. A stand-alone number
108 specifies a time in seconds. If suffixed with a time
109 unit, the unit is honored. A concatenation of
110 multiple values with units is supported, in which case
111 the values are added up. Example: "50" refers to 50
112 seconds; "2min 200ms" refers to 2 minutes plus 200
113 milliseconds, i.e. 120200ms. The following time units
114 are understood: s, min, h, d, w, ms, us.</para>
115
116 <para>Empty lines and lines starting with # or ; are
117 ignored. This may be used for commenting. Lines ending
118 in a backslash are concatenated with the following
119 line while reading and the backslash is replaced by a
120 space character. This may be used to wrap long lines.</para>
121
122 <para>If a line starts with <option>.include</option>
123 followed by a file name, the specified file will be
124 parsed at this point. Make sure that the file that is
125 included has the appropriate section headers before
126 any directives.</para>
127
128 <para>Along with a unit file
129 <filename>foo.service</filename> a directory
130 <filename>foo.service.wants/</filename> may exist. All
131 units symlinked from such a directory are implicitly
132 added as dependencies of type
133 <varname>Wanted=</varname> to the unit. This is useful
134 to hook units into the start-up of other units,
135 without having to modify their unit configuration
136 files. For details about the semantics of
137 <varname>Wanted=</varname> see below. The preferred
138 way to create symlinks in the
139 <filename>.wants/</filename> directory of a service is
140 with the <command>enable</command> command of the
141 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
142 tool which reads information from the [Install]
143 section of unit files. (See below.) A similar
144 functionality exists for <varname>Requires=</varname>
145 type dependencies as well, the directory suffix is
146 <filename>.requires/</filename> in this case.</para>
147
148 <para>Note that while systemd offers a flexible
149 dependency system between units it is recommended to
150 use this functionality only sparsely and instead rely
151 on techniques such as bus-based or socket-based
152 activation which makes dependencies implicit, which
153 both results in a simpler and more flexible
154 system.</para>
155
156 <para>Some unit names reflect paths existing in the
157 file system name space. Example: a device unit
158 <filename>dev-sda.device</filename> refers to a device
159 with the device node <filename>/dev/sda</filename> in
160 the file system namespace. If this applies a special
161 way to escape the path name is used, so that the
162 result is usable as part of a file name. Basically,
163 given a path, "/" is replaced by "-", and all
164 unprintable characters and the "-" are replaced by
165 C-style "\x20" escapes. The root directory "/" is
166 encoded as single dash, while otherwise the initial
167 and ending "/" is removed from all paths during
168 transformation. This escaping is reversible.</para>
169
170 <para>Optionally, units may be instantiated from a
171 template file at runtime. This allows creation of
172 multiple units from a single configuration file. If
173 systemd looks for a unit configuration file it will
174 first search for the literal unit name in the
175 filesystem. If that yields no success and the unit
176 name contains an @ character, systemd will look for a
177 unit template that shares the same name but with the
178 instance string (i.e. the part between the @ character
179 and the suffix) removed. Example: if a service
180 <filename>getty@tty3.service</filename> is requested
181 and no file by that name is found, systemd will look
182 for <filename>getty@.service</filename> and
183 instantiate a service from that configuration file if
184 it is found.</para>
185
186 <para>To refer to the instance string from
187 within the configuration file you may use the special
188 <literal>%i</literal> specifier in many of the
189 configuration options. Other specifiers exist, the
190 full list is:</para>
191
192 <table>
193 <title>Specifiers available in unit files</title>
194 <tgroup cols='3' align='left' colsep='1' rowsep='1'>
195 <colspec colname="spec" />
196 <colspec colname="mean" />
197 <colspec colname="detail" />
198 <thead>
199 <row>
200 <entry>Specifier</entry>
201 <entry>Meaning</entry>
202 <entry>Details</entry>
203 </row>
204 </thead>
205 <tbody>
206 <row>
207 <entry><literal>%n</literal></entry>
208 <entry>Full unit name</entry>
209 <entry></entry>
210 </row>
211 <row>
212 <entry><literal>%N</literal></entry>
213 <entry>Unescaped full unit name</entry>
214 <entry></entry>
215 </row>
216 <row>
217 <entry><literal>%p</literal></entry>
218 <entry>Prefix name</entry>
219 <entry>This refers to the string before the @, i.e. "getty" in the example above, where "tty3" is the instance name.</entry>
220 </row>
221 <row>
222 <entry><literal>%P</literal></entry>
223 <entry>Unescaped prefix name</entry>
224 <entry></entry>
225 </row>
226 <row>
227 <entry><literal>%i</literal></entry>
228 <entry>Instance name</entry>
229 <entry>This is the string between the @ character and the suffix.</entry>
230 </row>
231 <row>
232 <entry><literal>%I</literal></entry>
233 <entry>Unescaped instance name</entry>
234 <entry></entry>
235 </row>
236 <row>
237 <entry><literal>%f</literal></entry>
238 <entry>Unescaped file name</entry>
239 <entry>This is either the unescaped instance name (if set) with / prepended (if necessary), or the prefix name similarly prepended with /.</entry>
240 </row>
241 <row>
242 <entry><literal>%c</literal></entry>
243 <entry>Control group path of the unit</entry>
244 <entry></entry>
245 </row>
246 <row>
247 <entry><literal>%r</literal></entry>
248 <entry>Root control group path of systemd</entry>
249 <entry></entry>
250 </row>
251 <row>
252 <entry><literal>%R</literal></entry>
253 <entry>Parent directory of the root control group path of systemd</entry>
254 <entry></entry>
255 </row>
256 <row>
257 <entry><literal>%t</literal></entry>
258 <entry>Runtime socket dir</entry>
259 <entry>This is either /run (for the system manager) or $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR (for user managers).</entry>
260 </row>
261 <row>
262 <entry><literal>%u</literal></entry>
263 <entry>User name</entry>
264 <entry>This is the name of the configured user of the unit, or (if none is set) the user running the systemd instance.</entry>
265 </row>
266 <row>
267 <entry><literal>%h</literal></entry>
268 <entry>User home directory</entry>
269 <entry>This is the home directory of the configured user of the unit, or (if none is set) the user running the systemd instance.</entry>
270 </row>
271 <row>
272 <entry><literal>%s</literal></entry>
273 <entry>User shell</entry>
274 <entry>This is the shell of the configured user of the unit, or (if none is set) the user running the systemd instance.</entry>
275 </row>
276 </tbody>
277 </tgroup>
278 </table>
279
280 <para>If a unit file is empty (i.e. has the file size
281 0) or is symlinked to <filename>/dev/null</filename>
282 its configuration will not be loaded and it appears
283 with a load state of <literal>masked</literal>, and
284 cannot be activated. Use this as an effective way to
285 fully disable a unit, making it impossible to start it
286 even manually.</para>
287
288 <para>The unit file format is covered by the
289 <ulink
290 url="http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/InterfaceStabilityPromise">Interface
291 Stability Promise</ulink>.</para>
292 </refsect1>
293
294 <refsect1>
295 <title>Options</title>
296
297 <para>Unit file may include a [Unit] section, which
298 carries generic information about the unit that is not
299 dependent on the type of unit:</para>
300
301 <variablelist>
302
303 <varlistentry>
304 <term><varname>Description=</varname></term>
305 <listitem><para>A free-form string
306 describing the unit. This is intended
307 for use in UIs to show descriptive
308 information along with the unit
309 name.</para></listitem>
310 </varlistentry>
311
312 <varlistentry>
313 <term><varname>Documentation=</varname></term>
314 <listitem><para>A space separated list
315 of URIs referencing documentation for
316 this unit or its
317 configuration. Accepted are only URIs
318 of the types
319 <literal>http://</literal>,
320 <literal>https://</literal>,
321 <literal>file:</literal>,
322 <literal>info:</literal>,
323 <literal>man:</literal>. For more
324 information about the syntax of these
325 URIs see
326 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>uri</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para></listitem>
327 </varlistentry>
328
329 <varlistentry>
330 <term><varname>Requires=</varname></term>
331
332 <listitem><para>Configures requirement
333 dependencies on other units. If this
334 unit gets activated, the units listed
335 here will be activated as well. If one
336 of the other units gets deactivated or
337 its activation fails, this unit will
338 be deactivated. This option may be
339 specified more than once, in which
340 case requirement dependencies for all
341 listed names are created. Note that
342 requirement dependencies do not
343 influence the order in which services
344 are started or stopped. This has to be
345 configured independently with the
346 <varname>After=</varname> or
347 <varname>Before=</varname> options. If
348 a unit
349 <filename>foo.service</filename>
350 requires a unit
351 <filename>bar.service</filename> as
352 configured with
353 <varname>Requires=</varname> and no
354 ordering is configured with
355 <varname>After=</varname> or
356 <varname>Before=</varname>, then both
357 units will be started simultaneously
358 and without any delay between them if
359 <filename>foo.service</filename> is
360 activated. Often it is a better choice
361 to use <varname>Wants=</varname>
362 instead of
363 <varname>Requires=</varname> in order
364 to achieve a system that is more
365 robust when dealing with failing
366 services.</para>
367
368 <para>Note that dependencies of this
369 type may also be configured outside of
370 the unit configuration file by
371 adding a symlink to a
372 <filename>.requires/</filename> directory
373 accompanying the unit file. For
374 details see above.</para></listitem>
375 </varlistentry>
376
377 <varlistentry>
378 <term><varname>RequiresOverridable=</varname></term>
379
380 <listitem><para>Similar to
381 <varname>Requires=</varname>.
382 Dependencies listed in
383 <varname>RequiresOverridable=</varname>
384 which cannot be fulfilled or fail to
385 start are ignored if the startup was
386 explicitly requested by the user. If
387 the start-up was pulled in indirectly
388 by some dependency or automatic
389 start-up of units that is not
390 requested by the user this dependency
391 must be fulfilled and otherwise the
392 transaction fails. Hence, this option
393 may be used to configure dependencies
394 that are normally honored unless the
395 user explicitly starts up the unit, in
396 which case whether they failed or not
397 is irrelevant.</para></listitem>
398
399 </varlistentry>
400 <varlistentry>
401 <term><varname>Requisite=</varname></term>
402 <term><varname>RequisiteOverridable=</varname></term>
403
404 <listitem><para>Similar to
405 <varname>Requires=</varname>
406 resp. <varname>RequiresOverridable=</varname>. However,
407 if a unit listed here is not started
408 already it will not be started and the
409 transaction fails
410 immediately.</para></listitem>
411 </varlistentry>
412
413 <varlistentry>
414 <term><varname>Wants=</varname></term>
415
416 <listitem><para>A weaker version of
417 <varname>Requires=</varname>. A unit
418 listed in this option will be started
419 if the configuring unit is. However,
420 if the listed unit fails to start up
421 or cannot be added to the transaction
422 this has no impact on the validity of
423 the transaction as a whole. This is
424 the recommended way to hook start-up
425 of one unit to the start-up of another
426 unit.</para>
427
428 <para>Note that dependencies of this
429 type may also be configured outside of
430 the unit configuration file by
431 adding a symlink to a
432 <filename>.wants/</filename> directory
433 accompanying the unit file. For
434 details see above.</para></listitem>
435 </varlistentry>
436
437 <varlistentry>
438 <term><varname>BindsTo=</varname></term>
439
440 <listitem><para>Configures requirement
441 dependencies, very similar in style to
442 <varname>Requires=</varname>, however
443 in addition to this behaviour it also
444 declares that this unit is stopped
445 when any of the units listed suddenly
446 disappears. Units can suddenly,
447 unexpectedly disappear if a service
448 terminates on its own choice, a device
449 is unplugged or a mount point
450 unmounted without involvement of
451 systemd.</para></listitem>
452 </varlistentry>
453
454 <varlistentry>
455 <term><varname>PartOf=</varname></term>
456
457 <listitem><para>Configures dependencies
458 similar to <varname>Requires=</varname>,
459 but limited to stopping and restarting
460 of units. When systemd stops or restarts
461 the units listed here, the action is
462 propagated to this unit.
463 Note that this is a one way dependency -
464 changes to this unit do not affect the
465 listed units.
466 </para></listitem>
467 </varlistentry>
468
469 <varlistentry>
470 <term><varname>Conflicts=</varname></term>
471
472 <listitem><para>Configures negative
473 requirement dependencies. If a unit
474 has a
475 <varname>Conflicts=</varname> setting
476 on another unit, starting the former
477 will stop the latter and vice
478 versa. Note that this setting is
479 independent of and orthogonal to the
480 <varname>After=</varname> and
481 <varname>Before=</varname> ordering
482 dependencies.</para>
483
484 <para>If a unit A that conflicts with
485 a unit B is scheduled to be started at
486 the same time as B, the transaction
487 will either fail (in case both are
488 required part of the transaction) or
489 be modified to be fixed (in case one
490 or both jobs are not a required part
491 of the transaction). In the latter
492 case the job that is not the required
493 will be removed, or in case both are
494 not required the unit that conflicts
495 will be started and the unit that is
496 conflicted is
497 stopped.</para></listitem>
498 </varlistentry>
499
500 <varlistentry>
501 <term><varname>Before=</varname></term>
502 <term><varname>After=</varname></term>
503
504 <listitem><para>Configures ordering
505 dependencies between units. If a unit
506 <filename>foo.service</filename>
507 contains a setting
508 <option>Before=bar.service</option>
509 and both units are being started,
510 <filename>bar.service</filename>'s
511 start-up is delayed until
512 <filename>foo.service</filename> is
513 started up. Note that this setting is
514 independent of and orthogonal to the
515 requirement dependencies as configured
516 by <varname>Requires=</varname>. It is
517 a common pattern to include a unit
518 name in both the
519 <varname>After=</varname> and
520 <varname>Requires=</varname> option in
521 which case the unit listed will be
522 started before the unit that is
523 configured with these options. This
524 option may be specified more than
525 once, in which case ordering
526 dependencies for all listed names are
527 created. <varname>After=</varname> is
528 the inverse of
529 <varname>Before=</varname>, i.e. while
530 <varname>After=</varname> ensures that
531 the configured unit is started after
532 the listed unit finished starting up,
533 <varname>Before=</varname> ensures the
534 opposite, i.e. that the configured
535 unit is fully started up before the
536 listed unit is started. Note that when
537 two units with an ordering dependency
538 between them are shut down, the
539 inverse of the start-up order is
540 applied. i.e. if a unit is configured
541 with <varname>After=</varname> on
542 another unit, the former is stopped
543 before the latter if both are shut
544 down. If one unit with an ordering
545 dependency on another unit is shut
546 down while the latter is started up,
547 the shut down is ordered before the
548 start-up regardless whether the
549 ordering dependency is actually of
550 type <varname>After=</varname> or
551 <varname>Before=</varname>. If two
552 units have no ordering dependencies
553 between them they are shut down
554 resp. started up simultaneously, and
555 no ordering takes
556 place. </para></listitem>
557 </varlistentry>
558
559 <varlistentry>
560 <term><varname>OnFailure=</varname></term>
561
562 <listitem><para>Lists one or more
563 units that are activated when this
564 unit enters the
565 '<literal>failed</literal>'
566 state.</para></listitem>
567 </varlistentry>
568
569 <varlistentry>
570 <term><varname>PropagatesReloadTo=</varname></term>
571 <term><varname>ReloadPropagatedFrom=</varname></term>
572
573 <listitem><para>Lists one or more
574 units where reload requests on the
575 unit will be propagated to/on the
576 other unit will be propagated
577 from. Issuing a reload request on a
578 unit will automatically also enqueue a
579 reload request on all units that the
580 reload request shall be propagated to
581 via these two
582 settings.</para></listitem>
583 </varlistentry>
584
585 <varlistentry>
586 <term><varname>RequiresMountsFor=</varname></term>
587
588 <listitem><para>Takes a space
589 separated list of absolute paths. Automatically
590 adds dependencies of type
591 <varname>Requires=</varname> and
592 <varname>After=</varname> for all
593 mount units required to access the
594 specified path.</para></listitem>
595 </varlistentry>
596
597 <varlistentry>
598 <term><varname>OnFailureIsolate=</varname></term>
599
600 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
601 argument. If <option>true</option> the
602 unit listed in
603 <varname>OnFailure=</varname> will be
604 enqueued in isolation mode, i.e. all
605 units that are not its dependency will
606 be stopped. If this is set only a
607 single unit may be listed in
608 <varname>OnFailure=</varname>. Defaults
609 to
610 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
611 </varlistentry>
612
613 <varlistentry>
614 <term><varname>IgnoreOnIsolate=</varname></term>
615
616 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
617 argument. If <option>true</option>
618 this unit will not be stopped when
619 isolating another unit. Defaults to
620 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
621 </varlistentry>
622
623 <varlistentry>
624 <term><varname>IgnoreOnSnapshot=</varname></term>
625
626 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
627 argument. If <option>true</option>
628 this unit will not be included in
629 snapshots. Defaults to
630 <option>true</option> for device and
631 snapshot units, <option>false</option>
632 for the others.</para></listitem>
633 </varlistentry>
634
635 <varlistentry>
636 <term><varname>StopWhenUnneeded=</varname></term>
637
638 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
639 argument. If <option>true</option>
640 this unit will be stopped when it is
641 no longer used. Note that in order to
642 minimize the work to be executed,
643 systemd will not stop units by default
644 unless they are conflicting with other
645 units, or the user explicitly
646 requested their shut down. If this
647 option is set, a unit will be
648 automatically cleaned up if no other
649 active unit requires it. Defaults to
650 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
651 </varlistentry>
652
653 <varlistentry>
654 <term><varname>RefuseManualStart=</varname></term>
655 <term><varname>RefuseManualStop=</varname></term>
656
657 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
658 argument. If <option>true</option>
659 this unit can only be activated
660 (resp. deactivated) indirectly. In
661 this case explicit start-up
662 (resp. termination) requested by the
663 user is denied, however if it is
664 started (resp. stopped) as a
665 dependency of another unit, start-up
666 (resp. termination) will succeed. This
667 is mostly a safety feature to ensure
668 that the user does not accidentally
669 activate units that are not intended
670 to be activated explicitly, and not
671 accidentally deactivate units that are
672 not intended to be deactivated.
673 These options default to
674 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
675 </varlistentry>
676
677 <varlistentry>
678 <term><varname>AllowIsolate=</varname></term>
679
680 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
681 argument. If <option>true</option>
682 this unit may be used with the
683 <command>systemctl isolate</command>
684 command. Otherwise this will be
685 refused. It probably is a good idea to
686 leave this disabled except for target
687 units that shall be used similar to
688 runlevels in SysV init systems, just
689 as a precaution to avoid unusable
690 system states. This option defaults to
691 <option>false</option>.</para></listitem>
692 </varlistentry>
693
694 <varlistentry>
695 <term><varname>DefaultDependencies=</varname></term>
696
697 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean
698 argument. If <option>true</option>
699 (the default), a few default
700 dependencies will implicitly be
701 created for the unit. The actual
702 dependencies created depend on the
703 unit type. For example, for service
704 units, these dependencies ensure that
705 the service is started only after
706 basic system initialization is
707 completed and is properly terminated on
708 system shutdown. See the respective
709 man pages for details. Generally, only
710 services involved with early boot or
711 late shutdown should set this option
712 to <option>false</option>. It is
713 highly recommended to leave this
714 option enabled for the majority of
715 common units. If set to
716 <option>false</option> this option
717 does not disable all implicit
718 dependencies, just non-essential
719 ones.</para></listitem>
720 </varlistentry>
721
722 <varlistentry>
723 <term><varname>JobTimeoutSec=</varname></term>
724
725 <listitem><para>When clients are
726 waiting for a job of this unit to
727 complete, time out after the specified
728 time. If this time limit is reached
729 the job will be cancelled, the unit
730 however will not change state or even
731 enter the '<literal>failed</literal>'
732 mode. This value defaults to 0 (job
733 timeouts disabled), except for device
734 units. NB: this timeout is independent
735 from any unit-specific timeout (for
736 example, the timeout set with
737 <varname>Timeout=</varname> in service
738 units) as the job timeout has no
739 effect on the unit itself, only on the
740 job that might be pending for it. Or
741 in other words: unit-specific timeouts
742 are useful to abort unit state
743 changes, and revert them. The job
744 timeout set with this option however
745 is useful to abort only the job
746 waiting for the unit state to
747 change.</para></listitem>
748 </varlistentry>
749
750 <varlistentry>
751 <term><varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname></term>
752 <term><varname>ConditionPathExistsGlob=</varname></term>
753 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsDirectory=</varname></term>
754 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname></term>
755 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsMountPoint=</varname></term>
756 <term><varname>ConditionPathIsReadWrite=</varname></term>
757 <term><varname>ConditionDirectoryNotEmpty=</varname></term>
758 <term><varname>ConditionFileIsExecutable=</varname></term>
759 <term><varname>ConditionKernelCommandLine=</varname></term>
760 <term><varname>ConditionVirtualization=</varname></term>
761 <term><varname>ConditionSecurity=</varname></term>
762 <term><varname>ConditionCapability=</varname></term>
763 <term><varname>ConditionHost=</varname></term>
764 <term><varname>ConditionNull=</varname></term>
765
766 <listitem><para>Before starting a unit
767 verify that the specified condition is
768 true. If it is not true the starting
769 of the unit will be skipped, however
770 all ordering dependencies of it are
771 still respected. A failing condition
772 will not result in the unit being
773 moved into a failure state. The
774 condition is checked at the time the
775 queued start job is to be
776 executed.</para>
777
778 <para>With
779 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
780 a file existence condition is
781 checked before a unit is started. If
782 the specified absolute path name does
783 not exist the condition will
784 fail. If the absolute path name passed
785 to
786 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
787 is prefixed with an exclamation mark
788 ('!'), the test is negated, and the unit
789 is only started if the path does not
790 exist.</para>
791
792 <para><varname>ConditionPathExistsGlob=</varname>
793 is similar to
794 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>,
795 but checks for the existence of at
796 least one file or directory matching
797 the specified globbing pattern.</para>
798
799 <para><varname>ConditionPathIsDirectory=</varname>
800 is similar to
801 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
802 but verifies whether a certain path
803 exists and is a
804 directory.</para>
805
806 <para><varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname>
807 is similar to
808 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
809 but verifies whether a certain path
810 exists and is a symbolic
811 link.</para>
812
813 <para><varname>ConditionPathIsMountPoint=</varname>
814 is similar to
815 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
816 but verifies whether a certain path
817 exists and is a mount
818 point.</para>
819
820 <para><varname>ConditionPathIsReadWrite=</varname>
821 is similar to
822 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
823 but verifies whether the underlying
824 file system is readable and writable
825 (i.e. not mounted
826 read-only).</para>
827
828 <para><varname>ConditionFileIsExecutable=</varname>
829 is similar to
830 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
831 but verifies whether a certain path
832 exists, is a regular file and marked
833 executable.</para>
834
835 <para><varname>ConditionDirectoryNotEmpty=</varname>
836 is similar to
837 <varname>ConditionPathExists=</varname>
838 but verifies whether a certain path
839 exists and is a non-empty
840 directory.</para>
841
842 <para>Similarly,
843 <varname>ConditionKernelCommandLine=</varname>
844 may be used to check whether a
845 specific kernel command line option is
846 set (or if prefixed with the
847 exclamation mark unset). The argument
848 must either be a single word, or an
849 assignment (i.e. two words, separated
850 '='). In the former
851 case the kernel command line is
852 searched for the word appearing as is,
853 or as left hand side of an
854 assignment. In the latter case the
855 exact assignment is looked for with
856 right and left hand side
857 matching.</para>
858
859 <para><varname>ConditionVirtualization=</varname>
860 may be used to check whether the
861 system is executed in a virtualized
862 environment and optionally test
863 whether it is a specific
864 implementation. Takes either boolean
865 value to check if being executed in
866 any virtualized environment, or one of
867 <varname>vm</varname> and
868 <varname>container</varname> to test
869 against a generic type of
870 virtualization solution, or one of
871 <varname>qemu</varname>,
872 <varname>kvm</varname>,
873 <varname>vmware</varname>,
874 <varname>microsoft</varname>,
875 <varname>oracle</varname>,
876 <varname>xen</varname>,
877 <varname>bochs</varname>,
878 <varname>chroot</varname>,
879 <varname>openvz</varname>,
880 <varname>lxc</varname>,
881 <varname>lxc-libvirt</varname>,
882 <varname>systemd-nspawn</varname> to
883 test against a specific
884 implementation. If multiple
885 virtualization technologies are nested
886 only the innermost is considered. The
887 test may be negated by prepending an
888 exclamation mark.</para>
889
890 <para><varname>ConditionSecurity=</varname>
891 may be used to check whether the given
892 security module is enabled on the
893 system. Currently the only recognized
894 value is <varname>selinux</varname>.
895 The test may be negated by prepending
896 an exclamation
897 mark.</para>
898
899 <para><varname>ConditionCapability=</varname>
900 may be used to check whether the given
901 capability exists in the capability
902 bounding set of the service manager
903 (i.e. this does not check whether
904 capability is actually available in
905 the permitted or effective sets, see
906 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
907 for details). Pass a capability name
908 such as <literal>CAP_MKNOD</literal>,
909 possibly prefixed with an exclamation
910 mark to negate the check.</para>
911
912 <para><varname>ConditionHost=</varname>
913 may be used to match against the
914 host name or machine ID of the
915 host. This either takes a host name
916 string (optionally with shell style
917 globs) which is tested against the
918 locally set host name as returned by
919 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>gethostname</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
920 or a machine ID formatted as string
921 (see
922 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>machine-id</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>).
923 The test may be negated by prepending
924 an exclamation mark.</para>
925
926 <para>Finally,
927 <varname>ConditionNull=</varname> may
928 be used to add a constant condition
929 check value to the unit. It takes a
930 boolean argument. If set to
931 <varname>false</varname> the condition
932 will always fail, otherwise
933 succeed.</para>
934
935 <para>If multiple conditions are
936 specified the unit will be executed if
937 all of them apply (i.e. a logical AND
938 is applied). Condition checks can be
939 prefixed with a pipe symbol (|) in
940 which case a condition becomes a
941 triggering condition. If at least one
942 triggering condition is defined for a
943 unit then the unit will be executed if
944 at least one of the triggering
945 conditions apply and all of the
946 non-triggering conditions. If you
947 prefix an argument with the pipe
948 symbol and an exclamation mark the
949 pipe symbol must be passed first, the
950 exclamation second. Except for
951 <varname>ConditionPathIsSymbolicLink=</varname>,
952 all path checks follow
953 symlinks.</para></listitem>
954 </varlistentry>
955
956 <varlistentry>
957 <term><varname>SourcePath=</varname></term>
958 <listitem><para>A path to a
959 configuration file this unit has been
960 generated from. This is primarily
961 useful for implementation of generator
962 tools that convert configuration from
963 an external configuration file format
964 into native unit files. Thus
965 functionality should not be used in
966 normal units.</para></listitem>
967 </varlistentry>
968 </variablelist>
969
970 <para>Unit file may include a [Install] section, which
971 carries installation information for the unit. This
972 section is not interpreted by
973 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
974 during runtime. It is used exclusively by the
975 <command>enable</command> and
976 <command>disable</command> commands of the
977 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
978 tool during installation of a unit:</para>
979
980 <variablelist>
981 <varlistentry>
982 <term><varname>Alias=</varname></term>
983
984 <listitem><para>Additional names this
985 unit shall be installed under. The
986 names listed here must have the same
987 suffix (i.e. type) as the unit file
988 name. This option may be specified
989 more than once, in which case all
990 listed names are used. At installation
991 time,
992 <command>systemctl enable</command>
993 will create symlinks from these names
994 to the unit file name.</para></listitem>
995 </varlistentry>
996
997 <varlistentry>
998 <term><varname>WantedBy=</varname></term>
999 <term><varname>RequiredBy=</varname></term>
1000
1001 <listitem><para>Installs a symlink in
1002 the <filename>.wants/</filename>
1003 resp. <filename>.requires/</filename>
1004 subdirectory for a unit. This has the
1005 effect that when the listed unit name
1006 is activated the unit listing it is
1007 activated
1008 too. <command>WantedBy=foo.service</command>
1009 in a service
1010 <filename>bar.service</filename> is
1011 mostly equivalent to
1012 <command>Alias=foo.service.wants/bar.service</command>
1013 in the same file.</para></listitem>
1014 </varlistentry>
1015
1016 <varlistentry>
1017 <term><varname>Also=</varname></term>
1018
1019 <listitem><para>Additional units to
1020 install when this unit is
1021 installed. If the user requests
1022 installation of a unit with this
1023 option configured,
1024 <command>systemctl enable</command>
1025 will automatically install units
1026 listed in this option as
1027 well.</para></listitem>
1028 </varlistentry>
1029 </variablelist>
1030
1031 </refsect1>
1032
1033 <refsect1>
1034 <title>See Also</title>
1035 <para>
1036 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1037 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1038 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.special</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1039 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1040 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.socket</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1041 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.device</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1042 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1043 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.automount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1044 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.swap</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1045 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.target</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1046 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.path</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1047 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.timer</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1048 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.snapshot</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1049 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1050 </para>
1051 </refsect1>
1052
1053 </refentry>