1LOGIND.CONF(5) logind.conf LOGIND.CONF(5)
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6 logind.conf, logind.conf.d - Login manager configuration files
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9 /etc/systemd/logind.conf
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11 /etc/systemd/logind.conf.d/*.conf
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13 /run/systemd/logind.conf.d/*.conf
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15 /usr/lib/systemd/logind.conf.d/*.conf
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18 These files configure various parameters of the systemd login manager,
19 systemd-logind.service(8). See systemd.syntax(5) for a general
20 description of the syntax.
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23 The default configuration is defined during compilation, so a
24 configuration file is only needed when it is necessary to deviate from
25 those defaults. By default, the configuration file in /etc/systemd/
26 contains commented out entries showing the defaults as a guide to the
27 administrator. This file can be edited to create local overrides.
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29 When packages need to customize the configuration, they can install
30 configuration snippets in /usr/lib/systemd/*.conf.d/ or
31 /usr/local/lib/systemd/*.conf.d/. The main configuration file is read
32 before any of the configuration directories, and has the lowest
33 precedence; entries in a file in any configuration directory override
34 entries in the single configuration file. Files in the *.conf.d/
35 configuration subdirectories are sorted by their filename in
36 lexicographic order, regardless of in which of the subdirectories they
37 reside. When multiple files specify the same option, for options which
38 accept just a single value, the entry in the file with the
39 lexicographically latest name takes precedence. For options which
40 accept a list of values, entries are collected as they occur in files
41 sorted lexicographically.
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43 Files in /etc/ are reserved for the local administrator, who may use
44 this logic to override the configuration files installed by vendor
45 packages. It is recommended to prefix all filenames in those
46 subdirectories with a two-digit number and a dash, to simplify the
47 ordering of the files.
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49 To disable a configuration file supplied by the vendor, the recommended
50 way is to place a symlink to /dev/null in the configuration directory
51 in /etc/, with the same filename as the vendor configuration file.
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54 All options are configured in the "[Login]" section:
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56 NAutoVTs=
57 Takes a positive integer. Configures how many virtual terminals
58 (VTs) to allocate by default that, when switched to and are
59 previously unused, "autovt" services are automatically spawned on.
60 These services are instantiated from the template unit
61 autovt@.service for the respective VT TTY name, for example,
62 autovt@tty4.service. By default, autovt@.service is linked to
63 getty@.service. In other words, login prompts are started
64 dynamically as the user switches to unused virtual terminals.
65 Hence, this parameter controls how many login "gettys" are
66 available on the VTs. If a VT is already used by some other
67 subsystem (for example, a graphical login), this kind of activation
68 will not be attempted. Note that the VT configured in ReserveVT= is
69 always subject to this kind of activation, even if it is not one of
70 the VTs configured with the NAutoVTs= directive. Defaults to 6.
71 When set to 0, automatic spawning of "autovt" services is disabled.
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73 ReserveVT=
74 Takes a positive integer. Identifies one virtual terminal that
75 shall unconditionally be reserved for autovt@.service activation
76 (see above). The VT selected with this option will be marked busy
77 unconditionally, so that no other subsystem will allocate it. This
78 functionality is useful to ensure that, regardless of how many VTs
79 are allocated by other subsystems, one login "getty" is always
80 available. Defaults to 6 (in other words, there will always be a
81 "getty" available on Alt-F6.). When set to 0, VT reservation is
82 disabled.
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84 KillUserProcesses=
85 Takes a boolean argument. Configures whether the processes of a
86 user should be killed when the user logs out. If true, the scope
87 unit corresponding to the session and all processes inside that
88 scope will be terminated. If false, the scope is "abandoned", see
89 systemd.scope(5), and processes are not killed. Defaults to "no",
90 but see the options KillOnlyUsers= and KillExcludeUsers= below.
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92 In addition to session processes, user process may run under the
93 user manager unit user@.service. Depending on the linger settings,
94 this may allow users to run processes independent of their login
95 sessions. See the description of enable-linger in loginctl(1).
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97 Note that setting KillUserProcesses=yes will break tools like
98 screen(1) and tmux(1), unless they are moved out of the session
99 scope. See example in systemd-run(1).
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101 KillOnlyUsers=, KillExcludeUsers=
102 These settings take space-separated lists of usernames that
103 override the KillUserProcesses= setting. A user name may be added
104 to KillExcludeUsers= to exclude the processes in the session scopes
105 of that user from being killed even if KillUserProcesses=yes is
106 set. If KillExcludeUsers= is not set, the "root" user is excluded
107 by default. KillExcludeUsers= may be set to an empty value to
108 override this default. If a user is not excluded, KillOnlyUsers= is
109 checked next. If this setting is specified, only the session scopes
110 of those users will be killed. Otherwise, users are subject to the
111 KillUserProcesses=yes setting.
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113 IdleAction=
114 Configures the action to take when the system is idle. Takes one of
115 "ignore", "poweroff", "reboot", "halt", "kexec", "suspend",
116 "hibernate", "hybrid-sleep", "suspend-then-hibernate", and "lock".
117 Defaults to "ignore".
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119 Note that this requires that user sessions correctly report the
120 idle status to the system. The system will execute the action after
121 all sessions report that they are idle, no idle inhibitor lock is
122 active, and subsequently, the time configured with IdleActionSec=
123 (see below) has expired.
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125 IdleActionSec=
126 Configures the delay after which the action configured in
127 IdleAction= (see above) is taken after the system is idle.
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129 InhibitDelayMaxSec=
130 Specifies the maximum time a system shutdown or sleep request is
131 delayed due to an inhibitor lock of type "delay" being active
132 before the inhibitor is ignored and the operation executes anyway.
133 Defaults to 5.
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135 UserStopDelaySec=
136 Specifies how long to keep the user record and per-user service
137 user@.service around for a user after they logged out fully. If set
138 to zero, the per-user service is terminated immediately when the
139 last session of the user has ended. If this option is configured to
140 non-zero rapid logout/login cycles are sped up, as the user's
141 service manager is not constantly restarted. If set to "infinity"
142 the per-user service for a user is never terminated again after
143 first login, and continues to run until system shutdown. Defaults
144 to 10s.
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146 HandlePowerKey=, HandleSuspendKey=, HandleHibernateKey=,
147 HandleLidSwitch=, HandleLidSwitchExternalPower=, HandleLidSwitchDocked=
148 Controls how logind shall handle the system power and sleep keys
149 and the lid switch to trigger actions such as system power-off or
150 suspend. Can be one of "ignore", "poweroff", "reboot", "halt",
151 "kexec", "suspend", "hibernate", "hybrid-sleep",
152 "suspend-then-hibernate", and "lock". If "ignore", logind will
153 never handle these keys. If "lock", all running sessions will be
154 screen-locked; otherwise, the specified action will be taken in the
155 respective event. Only input devices with the "power-switch" udev
156 tag will be watched for key/lid switch events. HandlePowerKey=
157 defaults to "poweroff". HandleSuspendKey= and HandleLidSwitch=
158 default to "suspend". HandleLidSwitchExternalPower= is completely
159 ignored by default (for backwards compatibility) — an explicit
160 value must be set before it will be used to determine behaviour.
161 HandleLidSwitchDocked= defaults to "ignore". HandleHibernateKey=
162 defaults to "hibernate". If the system is inserted in a docking
163 station, or if more than one display is connected, the action
164 specified by HandleLidSwitchDocked= occurs; if the system is on
165 external power the action (if any) specified by
166 HandleLidSwitchExternalPower= occurs; otherwise the
167 HandleLidSwitch= action occurs.
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169 A different application may disable logind's handling of system
170 power and sleep keys and the lid switch by taking a low-level
171 inhibitor lock ("handle-power-key", "handle-suspend-key",
172 "handle-hibernate-key", "handle-lid-switch"). This is most commonly
173 used by graphical desktop environments to take over suspend and
174 hibernation handling, and to use their own configuration
175 mechanisms. If a low-level inhibitor lock is taken, logind will not
176 take any action when that key or switch is triggered and the
177 Handle*= settings are irrelevant.
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179 PowerKeyIgnoreInhibited=, SuspendKeyIgnoreInhibited=,
180 HibernateKeyIgnoreInhibited=, LidSwitchIgnoreInhibited=
181 Controls whether actions that systemd-logind takes when the power
182 and sleep keys and the lid switch are triggered are subject to
183 high-level inhibitor locks ("shutdown", "sleep", "idle"). Low level
184 inhibitor locks ("handle-power-key", "handle-suspend-key",
185 "handle-hibernate-key", "handle-lid-switch"), are always honored,
186 irrespective of this setting.
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188 These settings take boolean arguments. If "no", the inhibitor locks
189 taken by applications are respected. If "yes", "shutdown", "sleep",
190 and "idle" inhibitor locks are ignored. PowerKeyIgnoreInhibited=,
191 SuspendKeyIgnoreInhibited=, and HibernateKeyIgnoreInhibited=
192 default to "no". LidSwitchIgnoreInhibited= defaults to "yes". This
193 means that when systemd-logind is handling events by itself (no low
194 level inhibitor locks are taken by another application), the lid
195 switch does not respect suspend blockers by default, but the power
196 and sleep keys do.
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198 HoldoffTimeoutSec=
199 Specifies the timeout after system startup or system resume in
200 which systemd will hold off on reacting to lid events. This is
201 required for the system to properly detect any hotplugged devices
202 so systemd can ignore lid events if external monitors, or docks,
203 are connected. If set to 0, systemd will always react immediately,
204 possibly before the kernel fully probed all hotplugged devices.
205 This is safe, as long as you do not care for systemd to account for
206 devices that have been plugged or unplugged while the system was
207 off. Defaults to 30s.
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209 RuntimeDirectorySize=
210 Sets the size limit on the $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR runtime directory for
211 each user who logs in. Takes a size in bytes, optionally suffixed
212 with the usual K, G, M, and T suffixes, to the base 1024 (IEC).
213 Alternatively, a numerical percentage suffixed by "%" may be
214 specified, which sets the size limit relative to the amount of
215 physical RAM. Defaults to 10%. Note that this size is a safety
216 limit only. As each runtime directory is a tmpfs file system, it
217 will only consume as much memory as is needed.
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219 InhibitorsMax=
220 Controls the maximum number of concurrent inhibitors to permit.
221 Defaults to 8192 (8K).
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223 SessionsMax=
224 Controls the maximum number of concurrent user sessions to manage.
225 Defaults to 8192 (8K). Depending on how the pam_systemd.so module
226 is included in the PAM stack configuration, further login sessions
227 will either be refused, or permitted but not tracked by
228 systemd-logind.
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230 RemoveIPC=
231 Controls whether System V and POSIX IPC objects belonging to the
232 user shall be removed when the user fully logs out. Takes a boolean
233 argument. If enabled, the user may not consume IPC resources after
234 the last of the user's sessions terminated. This covers System V
235 semaphores, shared memory and message queues, as well as POSIX
236 shared memory and message queues. Note that IPC objects of the root
237 user and other system users are excluded from the effect of this
238 setting. Defaults to "yes".
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241 systemd(1), systemd-logind.service(8), loginctl(1), systemd-
242 system.conf(5)
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246systemd 245 LOGIND.CONF(5)