1SYSTEMD(1) systemd SYSTEMD(1)
2
3
4
6 systemd, init - systemd system and service manager
7
9 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd [OPTIONS...]
10
11 init [OPTIONS...] {COMMAND}
12
14 systemd is a system and service manager for Linux operating systems.
15 When run as first process on boot (as PID 1), it acts as init system
16 that brings up and maintains userspace services. Separate instances are
17 started for logged-in users to start their services.
18
19 systemd is usually not invoked directly by the user, but is installed
20 as the /sbin/init symlink and started during early boot. The user
21 manager instances are started automatically through the
22 user@.service(5) service.
23
24 For compatibility with SysV, if the binary is called as init and is not
25 the first process on the machine (PID is not 1), it will execute
26 telinit and pass all command line arguments unmodified. That means init
27 and telinit are mostly equivalent when invoked from normal login
28 sessions. See telinit(8) for more information.
29
30 When run as a system instance, systemd interprets the configuration
31 file system.conf and the files in system.conf.d directories; when run
32 as a user instance, systemd interprets the configuration file user.conf
33 and the files in user.conf.d directories. See systemd-system.conf(5)
34 for more information.
35
37 systemd provides a dependency system between various entities called
38 "units" of 11 different types. Units encapsulate various objects that
39 are relevant for system boot-up and maintenance. The majority of units
40 are configured in unit configuration files, whose syntax and basic set
41 of options is described in systemd.unit(5), however some are created
42 automatically from other configuration, dynamically from system state
43 or programmatically at runtime. Units may be "active" (meaning started,
44 bound, plugged in, ..., depending on the unit type, see below), or
45 "inactive" (meaning stopped, unbound, unplugged, ...), as well as in
46 the process of being activated or deactivated, i.e. between the two
47 states (these states are called "activating", "deactivating"). A
48 special "failed" state is available as well, which is very similar to
49 "inactive" and is entered when the service failed in some way (process
50 returned error code on exit, or crashed, an operation timed out, or
51 after too many restarts). If this state is entered, the cause will be
52 logged, for later reference. Note that the various unit types may have
53 a number of additional substates, which are mapped to the five
54 generalized unit states described here.
55
56 The following unit types are available:
57
58 1. Service units, which start and control daemons and the processes
59 they consist of. For details, see systemd.service(5).
60
61 2. Socket units, which encapsulate local IPC or network sockets in the
62 system, useful for socket-based activation. For details about
63 socket units, see systemd.socket(5), for details on socket-based
64 activation and other forms of activation, see daemon(7).
65
66 3. Target units are useful to group units, or provide well-known
67 synchronization points during boot-up, see systemd.target(5).
68
69 4. Device units expose kernel devices in systemd and may be used to
70 implement device-based activation. For details, see
71 systemd.device(5).
72
73 5. Mount units control mount points in the file system, for details
74 see systemd.mount(5).
75
76 6. Automount units provide automount capabilities, for on-demand
77 mounting of file systems as well as parallelized boot-up. See
78 systemd.automount(5).
79
80 7. Timer units are useful for triggering activation of other units
81 based on timers. You may find details in systemd.timer(5).
82
83 8. Swap units are very similar to mount units and encapsulate memory
84 swap partitions or files of the operating system. They are
85 described in systemd.swap(5).
86
87 9. Path units may be used to activate other services when file system
88 objects change or are modified. See systemd.path(5).
89
90 10. Slice units may be used to group units which manage system
91 processes (such as service and scope units) in a hierarchical tree
92 for resource management purposes. See systemd.slice(5).
93
94 11. Scope units are similar to service units, but manage foreign
95 processes instead of starting them as well. See systemd.scope(5).
96
97 Units are named as their configuration files. Some units have special
98 semantics. A detailed list is available in systemd.special(7).
99
100 systemd knows various kinds of dependencies, including positive and
101 negative requirement dependencies (i.e. Requires= and Conflicts=) as
102 well as ordering dependencies (After= and Before=). NB: ordering and
103 requirement dependencies are orthogonal. If only a requirement
104 dependency exists between two units (e.g. foo.service requires
105 bar.service), but no ordering dependency (e.g. foo.service after
106 bar.service) and both are requested to start, they will be started in
107 parallel. It is a common pattern that both requirement and ordering
108 dependencies are placed between two units. Also note that the majority
109 of dependencies are implicitly created and maintained by systemd. In
110 most cases, it should be unnecessary to declare additional dependencies
111 manually, however it is possible to do this.
112
113 Application programs and units (via dependencies) may request state
114 changes of units. In systemd, these requests are encapsulated as 'jobs'
115 and maintained in a job queue. Jobs may succeed or can fail, their
116 execution is ordered based on the ordering dependencies of the units
117 they have been scheduled for.
118
119 On boot systemd activates the target unit default.target whose job is
120 to activate on-boot services and other on-boot units by pulling them in
121 via dependencies. Usually, the unit name is just an alias (symlink) for
122 either graphical.target (for fully-featured boots into the UI) or
123 multi-user.target (for limited console-only boots for use in embedded
124 or server environments, or similar; a subset of graphical.target).
125 However, it is at the discretion of the administrator to configure it
126 as an alias to any other target unit. See systemd.special(7) for
127 details about these target units.
128
129 systemd only keeps a minimal set of units loaded into memory.
130 Specifically, the only units that are kept loaded into memory are those
131 for which at least one of the following conditions is true:
132
133 1. It is in an active, activating, deactivating or failed state (i.e.
134 in any unit state except for "inactive")
135
136 2. It has a job queued for it
137
138 3. It is a dependency of at least one other unit that is loaded into
139 memory
140
141 4. It has some form of resource still allocated (e.g. a service unit
142 that is inactive but for which a process is still lingering that
143 ignored the request to be terminated)
144
145 5. It has been pinned into memory programmatically by a D-Bus call
146
147 systemd will automatically and implicitly load units from disk — if
148 they are not loaded yet — as soon as operations are requested for them.
149 Thus, in many respects, the fact whether a unit is loaded or not is
150 invisible to clients. Use systemctl list-units --all to comprehensively
151 list all units currently loaded. Any unit for which none of the
152 conditions above applies is promptly unloaded. Note that when a unit is
153 unloaded from memory its accounting data is flushed out too. However,
154 this data is generally not lost, as a journal log record is generated
155 declaring the consumed resources whenever a unit shuts down.
156
157 Processes systemd spawns are placed in individual Linux control groups
158 named after the unit which they belong to in the private systemd
159 hierarchy. (see cgroups.txt[1] for more information about control
160 groups, or short "cgroups"). systemd uses this to effectively keep
161 track of processes. Control group information is maintained in the
162 kernel, and is accessible via the file system hierarchy (beneath
163 /sys/fs/cgroup/systemd/), or in tools such as systemd-cgls(1) or ps(1)
164 (ps xawf -eo pid,user,cgroup,args is particularly useful to list all
165 processes and the systemd units they belong to.).
166
167 systemd is compatible with the SysV init system to a large degree: SysV
168 init scripts are supported and simply read as an alternative (though
169 limited) configuration file format. The SysV /dev/initctl interface is
170 provided, and compatibility implementations of the various SysV client
171 tools are available. In addition to that, various established Unix
172 functionality such as /etc/fstab or the utmp database are supported.
173
174 systemd has a minimal transaction system: if a unit is requested to
175 start up or shut down it will add it and all its dependencies to a
176 temporary transaction. Then, it will verify if the transaction is
177 consistent (i.e. whether the ordering of all units is cycle-free). If
178 it is not, systemd will try to fix it up, and removes non-essential
179 jobs from the transaction that might remove the loop. Also, systemd
180 tries to suppress non-essential jobs in the transaction that would stop
181 a running service. Finally it is checked whether the jobs of the
182 transaction contradict jobs that have already been queued, and
183 optionally the transaction is aborted then. If all worked out and the
184 transaction is consistent and minimized in its impact it is merged with
185 all already outstanding jobs and added to the run queue. Effectively
186 this means that before executing a requested operation, systemd will
187 verify that it makes sense, fixing it if possible, and only failing if
188 it really cannot work.
189
190 Note that transactions are generated independently of a unit's state at
191 runtime, hence, for example, if a start job is requested on an already
192 started unit, it will still generate a transaction and wake up any
193 inactive dependencies (and cause propagation of other jobs as per the
194 defined relationships). This is because the enqueued job is at the time
195 of execution compared to the target unit's state and is marked
196 successful and complete when both satisfy. However, this job also pulls
197 in other dependencies due to the defined relationships and thus leads
198 to, in our example, start jobs for any of those inactive units getting
199 queued as well.
200
201 systemd contains native implementations of various tasks that need to
202 be executed as part of the boot process. For example, it sets the
203 hostname or configures the loopback network device. It also sets up and
204 mounts various API file systems, such as /sys or /proc.
205
206 For more information about the concepts and ideas behind systemd,
207 please refer to the Original Design Document[2].
208
209 Note that some but not all interfaces provided by systemd are covered
210 by the Interface Portability and Stability Promise[3].
211
212 Units may be generated dynamically at boot and system manager reload
213 time, for example based on other configuration files or parameters
214 passed on the kernel command line. For details, see
215 systemd.generator(7).
216
217 The D-Bus API of systemd is described in org.freedesktop.systemd1(5)
218 and org.freedesktop.LogControl1(5).
219
220 Systems which invoke systemd in a container or initrd environment
221 should implement the Container Interface[4] or initrd Interface[5]
222 specifications, respectively.
223
225 System unit directories
226 The systemd system manager reads unit configuration from various
227 directories. Packages that want to install unit files shall place
228 them in the directory returned by pkg-config systemd
229 --variable=systemdsystemunitdir. Other directories checked are
230 /usr/local/lib/systemd/system and /usr/lib/systemd/system. User
231 configuration always takes precedence. pkg-config systemd
232 --variable=systemdsystemconfdir returns the path of the system
233 configuration directory. Packages should alter the content of these
234 directories only with the enable and disable commands of the
235 systemctl(1) tool. Full list of directories is provided in
236 systemd.unit(5).
237
238 User unit directories
239 Similar rules apply for the user unit directories. However, here
240 the XDG Base Directory specification[6] is followed to find units.
241 Applications should place their unit files in the directory
242 returned by pkg-config systemd --variable=systemduserunitdir.
243 Global configuration is done in the directory reported by
244 pkg-config systemd --variable=systemduserconfdir. The enable and
245 disable commands of the systemctl(1) tool can handle both global
246 (i.e. for all users) and private (for one user) enabling/disabling
247 of units. Full list of directories is provided in systemd.unit(5).
248
249 SysV init scripts directory
250 The location of the SysV init script directory varies between
251 distributions. If systemd cannot find a native unit file for a
252 requested service, it will look for a SysV init script of the same
253 name (with the .service suffix removed).
254
255 SysV runlevel link farm directory
256 The location of the SysV runlevel link farm directory varies
257 between distributions. systemd will take the link farm into account
258 when figuring out whether a service shall be enabled. Note that a
259 service unit with a native unit configuration file cannot be
260 started by activating it in the SysV runlevel link farm.
261
263 SIGTERM
264 Upon receiving this signal the systemd system manager serializes
265 its state, reexecutes itself and deserializes the saved state
266 again. This is mostly equivalent to systemctl daemon-reexec.
267
268 systemd user managers will start the exit.target unit when this
269 signal is received. This is mostly equivalent to systemctl --user
270 start exit.target --job-mode=replace-irreversibly.
271
272 SIGINT
273 Upon receiving this signal the systemd system manager will start
274 the ctrl-alt-del.target unit. This is mostly equivalent to
275 systemctl start ctrl-alt-del.target
276 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly. If this signal is received more
277 than 7 times per 2s, an immediate reboot is triggered. Note that
278 pressing Ctrl+Alt+Del on the console will trigger this signal.
279 Hence, if a reboot is hanging, pressing Ctrl+Alt+Del more than 7
280 times in 2 seconds is a relatively safe way to trigger an immediate
281 reboot.
282
283 systemd user managers treat this signal the same way as SIGTERM.
284
285 SIGWINCH
286 When this signal is received the systemd system manager will start
287 the kbrequest.target unit. This is mostly equivalent to systemctl
288 start kbrequest.target.
289
290 This signal is ignored by systemd user managers.
291
292 SIGPWR
293 When this signal is received the systemd manager will start the
294 sigpwr.target unit. This is mostly equivalent to systemctl start
295 sigpwr.target.
296
297 SIGUSR1
298 When this signal is received the systemd manager will try to
299 reconnect to the D-Bus bus.
300
301 SIGUSR2
302 When this signal is received the systemd manager will log its
303 complete state in human-readable form. The data logged is the same
304 as printed by systemd-analyze dump.
305
306 SIGHUP
307 Reloads the complete daemon configuration. This is mostly
308 equivalent to systemctl daemon-reload.
309
310 SIGRTMIN+0
311 Enters default mode, starts the default.target unit. This is mostly
312 equivalent to systemctl isolate default.target.
313
314 SIGRTMIN+1
315 Enters rescue mode, starts the rescue.target unit. This is mostly
316 equivalent to systemctl isolate rescue.target.
317
318 SIGRTMIN+2
319 Enters emergency mode, starts the emergency.service unit. This is
320 mostly equivalent to systemctl isolate emergency.service.
321
322 SIGRTMIN+3
323 Halts the machine, starts the halt.target unit. This is mostly
324 equivalent to systemctl start halt.target
325 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly.
326
327 SIGRTMIN+4
328 Powers off the machine, starts the poweroff.target unit. This is
329 mostly equivalent to systemctl start poweroff.target
330 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly.
331
332 SIGRTMIN+5
333 Reboots the machine, starts the reboot.target unit. This is mostly
334 equivalent to systemctl start reboot.target
335 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly.
336
337 SIGRTMIN+6
338 Reboots the machine via kexec, starts the kexec.target unit. This
339 is mostly equivalent to systemctl start kexec.target
340 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly.
341
342 SIGRTMIN+13
343 Immediately halts the machine.
344
345 SIGRTMIN+14
346 Immediately powers off the machine.
347
348 SIGRTMIN+15
349 Immediately reboots the machine.
350
351 SIGRTMIN+16
352 Immediately reboots the machine with kexec.
353
354 SIGRTMIN+20
355 Enables display of status messages on the console, as controlled
356 via systemd.show_status=1 on the kernel command line.
357
358 SIGRTMIN+21
359 Disables display of status messages on the console, as controlled
360 via systemd.show_status=0 on the kernel command line.
361
362 SIGRTMIN+22
363 Sets the service manager's log level to "debug", in a fashion
364 equivalent to systemd.log_level=debug on the kernel command line.
365
366 SIGRTMIN+23
367 Restores the log level to its configured value. The configured
368 value is derived from – in order of priority – the value specified
369 with systemd.log-level= on the kernel command line, or the value
370 specified with LogLevel= in the configuration file, or the built-in
371 default of "info".
372
373 SIGRTMIN+24
374 Immediately exits the manager (only available for --user
375 instances).
376
377 SIGRTMIN+26
378 Restores the log target to its configured value. The configured
379 value is derived from – in order of priority – the value specified
380 with systemd.log-target= on the kernel command line, or the value
381 specified with LogTarget= in the configuration file, or the
382 built-in default.
383
384 SIGRTMIN+27, SIGRTMIN+28
385 Sets the log target to "console" on SIGRTMIN+27 (or "kmsg" on
386 SIGRTMIN+28), in a fashion equivalent to systemd.log_target=console
387 (or systemd.log_target=kmsg on SIGRTMIN+28) on the kernel command
388 line.
389
391 $SYSTEMD_LOG_COLOR
392 Controls whether systemd highlights important log messages. This
393 can be overridden with --log-color.
394
395 $SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL
396 systemd reads the log level from this environment variable. This
397 can be overridden with --log-level=.
398
399 $SYSTEMD_LOG_LOCATION
400 Controls whether systemd prints the code location along with log
401 messages. This can be overridden with --log-location.
402
403 $SYSTEMD_LOG_TARGET
404 systemd reads the log target from this environment variable. This
405 can be overridden with --log-target=.
406
407 $SYSTEMD_LOG_TIME
408 Controls whether systemd prefixes log messages with the current
409 time. This can be overridden with --log-time=.
410
411 $XDG_CONFIG_HOME, $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS, $XDG_DATA_HOME, $XDG_DATA_DIRS
412 The systemd user manager uses these variables in accordance to the
413 XDG Base Directory specification[6] to find its configuration.
414
415 $SYSTEMD_UNIT_PATH, $SYSTEMD_GENERATOR_PATH,
416 $SYSTEMD_ENVIRONMENT_GENERATOR_PATH
417 Controls where systemd looks for unit files and generators.
418
419 These variables may contain a list of paths, separated by colons
420 (":"). When set, if the list ends with an empty component ("...:"),
421 this list is prepended to the usual set of of paths. Otherwise, the
422 specified list replaces the usual set of paths.
423
424 $SYSTEMD_SYSVINIT_PATH
425 Controls where systemd looks for SysV init scripts.
426
427 $SYSTEMD_SYSVRCND_PATH
428 Controls where systemd looks for SysV init script runlevel link
429 farms.
430
431 $SYSTEMD_PAGER
432 Pager to use when --no-pager is not given; overrides $PAGER. If
433 neither $SYSTEMD_PAGER nor $PAGER are set, a set of well-known
434 pager implementations are tried in turn, including less(1) and
435 more(1), until one is found. If no pager implementation is
436 discovered no pager is invoked. Setting this environment variable
437 to an empty string or the value "cat" is equivalent to passing
438 --no-pager.
439
440 $SYSTEMD_LESS
441 Override the options passed to less (by default "FRSXMK").
442
443 Users might want to change two options in particular:
444
445 K
446 This option instructs the pager to exit immediately when Ctrl+C
447 is pressed. To allow less to handle Ctrl+C itself to switch
448 back to the pager command prompt, unset this option.
449
450 If the value of $SYSTEMD_LESS does not include "K", and the
451 pager that is invoked is less, Ctrl+C will be ignored by the
452 executable, and needs to be handled by the pager.
453
454 X
455 This option instructs the pager to not send termcap
456 initialization and deinitialization strings to the terminal. It
457 is set by default to allow command output to remain visible in
458 the terminal even after the pager exits. Nevertheless, this
459 prevents some pager functionality from working, in particular
460 paged output cannot be scrolled with the mouse.
461
462 See less(1) for more discussion.
463
464 $SYSTEMD_LESSCHARSET
465 Override the charset passed to less (by default "utf-8", if the
466 invoking terminal is determined to be UTF-8 compatible).
467
468 $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE
469 Takes a boolean argument. When true, the "secure" mode of the pager
470 is enabled; if false, disabled. If $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set
471 at all, secure mode is enabled if the effective UID is not the same
472 as the owner of the login session, see geteuid(2) and
473 sd_pid_get_owner_uid(3). In secure mode, LESSSECURE=1 will be set
474 when invoking the pager, and the pager shall disable commands that
475 open or create new files or start new subprocesses. When
476 $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set at all, pagers which are not known
477 to implement secure mode will not be used. (Currently only less(1)
478 implements secure mode.)
479
480 Note: when commands are invoked with elevated privileges, for
481 example under sudo(8) or pkexec(1), care must be taken to ensure
482 that unintended interactive features are not enabled. "Secure" mode
483 for the pager may be enabled automatically as describe above.
484 Setting SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE=0 or not removing it from the inherited
485 environment allows the user to invoke arbitrary commands. Note that
486 if the $SYSTEMD_PAGER or $PAGER variables are to be honoured,
487 $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE must be set too. It might be reasonable to
488 completly disable the pager using --no-pager instead.
489
490 $SYSTEMD_COLORS
491 The value must be a boolean. Controls whether colorized output
492 should be generated. This can be specified to override the decision
493 that systemd makes based on $TERM and what the console is connected
494 to.
495
496 $SYSTEMD_URLIFY
497 The value must be a boolean. Controls whether clickable links
498 should be generated in the output for terminal emulators supporting
499 this. This can be specified to override the decision that systemd
500 makes based on $TERM and other conditions.
501
502 $LISTEN_PID, $LISTEN_FDS, $LISTEN_FDNAMES
503 Set by systemd for supervised processes during socket-based
504 activation. See sd_listen_fds(3) for more information.
505
506 $NOTIFY_SOCKET
507 Set by systemd for supervised processes for status and start-up
508 completion notification. See sd_notify(3) for more information.
509
510 For further environment variables understood by systemd and its various
511 components, see Known Environment Variables[7].
512
514 When run as the system instance systemd parses a number of options
515 listed below. They can be specified as kernel command line
516 arguments[8], or through the "SystemdOptions" EFI variable (on EFI
517 systems). The kernel command line has higher priority. Following
518 variables are understood:
519
520 systemd.unit=, rd.systemd.unit=
521 Overrides the unit to activate on boot. Defaults to default.target.
522 This may be used to temporarily boot into a different boot unit,
523 for example rescue.target or emergency.service. See
524 systemd.special(7) for details about these units. The option
525 prefixed with "rd." is honored only in the initial RAM disk
526 (initrd), while the one that is not prefixed only in the main
527 system.
528
529 systemd.dump_core
530 Takes a boolean argument or enables the option if specified without
531 an argument. If enabled, the systemd manager (PID 1) dumps core
532 when it crashes. Otherwise, no core dump is created. Defaults to
533 enabled.
534
535 systemd.crash_chvt
536 Takes a positive integer, or a boolean argument. Can be also
537 specified without an argument, with the same effect as a positive
538 boolean. If a positive integer (in the range 1–63) is specified,
539 the system manager (PID 1) will activate the specified virtual
540 terminal when it crashes. Defaults to disabled, meaning that no
541 such switch is attempted. If set to enabled, the virtual terminal
542 the kernel messages are written to is used instead.
543
544 systemd.crash_shell
545 Takes a boolean argument or enables the option if specified without
546 an argument. If enabled, the system manager (PID 1) spawns a shell
547 when it crashes, after a 10s delay. Otherwise, no shell is spawned.
548 Defaults to disabled, for security reasons, as the shell is not
549 protected by password authentication.
550
551 systemd.crash_reboot
552 Takes a boolean argument or enables the option if specified without
553 an argument. If enabled, the system manager (PID 1) will reboot the
554 machine automatically when it crashes, after a 10s delay.
555 Otherwise, the system will hang indefinitely. Defaults to disabled,
556 in order to avoid a reboot loop. If combined with
557 systemd.crash_shell, the system is rebooted after the shell exits.
558
559 systemd.confirm_spawn
560 Takes a boolean argument or a path to the virtual console where the
561 confirmation messages should be emitted. Can be also specified
562 without an argument, with the same effect as a positive boolean. If
563 enabled, the system manager (PID 1) asks for confirmation when
564 spawning processes using /dev/console. If a path or a console name
565 (such as "ttyS0") is provided, the virtual console pointed to by
566 this path or described by the give name will be used instead.
567 Defaults to disabled.
568
569 systemd.service_watchdogs=
570 Takes a boolean argument. If disabled, all service runtime
571 watchdogs (WatchdogSec=) and emergency actions (e.g. OnFailure= or
572 StartLimitAction=) are ignored by the system manager (PID 1); see
573 systemd.service(5). Defaults to enabled, i.e. watchdogs and failure
574 actions are processed normally. The hardware watchdog is not
575 affected by this option.
576
577 systemd.show_status
578 Takes a boolean argument or the constants error and auto. Can be
579 also specified without an argument, with the same effect as a
580 positive boolean. If enabled, the systemd manager (PID 1) shows
581 terse service status updates on the console during bootup. With
582 error, only messages about failures are shown, but boot is
583 otherwise quiet. auto behaves like false until there is a
584 significant delay in boot. Defaults to enabled, unless quiet is
585 passed as kernel command line option, in which case it defaults to
586 error. If specified overrides the system manager configuration file
587 option ShowStatus=, see systemd-system.conf(5).
588
589 systemd.status_unit_format=
590 Takes either name or description as the value. If name, the system
591 manager will use unit names in status messages. If specified,
592 overrides the system manager configuration file option
593 StatusUnitFormat=, see systemd-system.conf(5).
594
595 systemd.log_color, systemd.log_level=, systemd.log_location,
596 systemd.log_target=, systemd.log_time
597 Controls log output, with the same effect as the
598 $SYSTEMD_LOG_COLOR, $SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL, $SYSTEMD_LOG_LOCATION,
599 $SYSTEMD_LOG_TARGET, $SYSTEMD_LOG_TIME, environment variables
600 described above. systemd.log_color, systemd.log_location, and
601 systemd.log_time can be specified without an argument, with the
602 same effect as a positive boolean.
603
604 systemd.default_standard_output=, systemd.default_standard_error=
605 Controls default standard output and error output for services and
606 sockets. That is, controls the default for StandardOutput= and
607 StandardError= (see systemd.exec(5) for details). Takes one of
608 inherit, null, tty, journal, journal+console, kmsg, kmsg+console.
609 If the argument is omitted systemd.default-standard-output=
610 defaults to journal and systemd.default-standard-error= to inherit.
611
612 systemd.setenv=
613 Takes a string argument in the form VARIABLE=VALUE. May be used to
614 set default environment variables to add to forked child processes.
615 May be used more than once to set multiple variables.
616
617 systemd.machine_id=
618 Takes a 32 character hex value to be used for setting the
619 machine-id. Intended mostly for network booting where the same
620 machine-id is desired for every boot.
621
622 systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy
623 When specified without an argument or with a true argument, enables
624 the usage of unified cgroup hierarchy[9] (a.k.a. cgroups-v2). When
625 specified with a false argument, fall back to hybrid or full legacy
626 cgroup hierarchy.
627
628 If this option is not specified, the default behaviour is
629 determined during compilation (the -Ddefault-hierarchy= meson
630 option). If the kernel does not support unified cgroup hierarchy,
631 the legacy hierarchy will be used even if this option is specified.
632
633 systemd.legacy_systemd_cgroup_controller
634 Takes effect if the full unified cgroup hierarchy is not used (see
635 previous option). When specified without an argument or with a true
636 argument, disables the use of "hybrid" cgroup hierarchy (i.e. a
637 cgroups-v2 tree used for systemd, and legacy cgroup hierarchy[10],
638 a.k.a. cgroups-v1, for other controllers), and forces a full
639 "legacy" mode. When specified with a false argument, enables the
640 use of "hybrid" hierarchy.
641
642 If this option is not specified, the default behaviour is
643 determined during compilation (the -Ddefault-hierarchy= meson
644 option). If the kernel does not support unified cgroup hierarchy,
645 the legacy hierarchy will be used even if this option is specified.
646
647 quiet
648 Turn off status output at boot, much like systemd.show_status=no
649 would. Note that this option is also read by the kernel itself and
650 disables kernel log output. Passing this option hence turns off the
651 usual output from both the system manager and the kernel.
652
653 debug
654 Turn on debugging output. This is equivalent to
655 systemd.log_level=debug. Note that this option is also read by the
656 kernel itself and enables kernel debug output. Passing this option
657 hence turns on the debug output from both the system manager and
658 the kernel.
659
660 emergency, rd.emergency, -b
661 Boot into emergency mode. This is equivalent to
662 systemd.unit=emergency.target or rd.systemd.unit=emergency.target,
663 respectively, and provided for compatibility reasons and to be
664 easier to type.
665
666 rescue, rd.rescue, single, s, S, 1
667 Boot into rescue mode. This is equivalent to
668 systemd.unit=rescue.target or rd.systemd.unit=rescue.target,
669 respectively, and provided for compatibility reasons and to be
670 easier to type.
671
672 2, 3, 4, 5
673 Boot into the specified legacy SysV runlevel. These are equivalent
674 to systemd.unit=runlevel2.target, systemd.unit=runlevel3.target,
675 systemd.unit=runlevel4.target, and systemd.unit=runlevel5.target,
676 respectively, and provided for compatibility reasons and to be
677 easier to type.
678
679 locale.LANG=, locale.LANGUAGE=, locale.LC_CTYPE=, locale.LC_NUMERIC=,
680 locale.LC_TIME=, locale.LC_COLLATE=, locale.LC_MONETARY=,
681 locale.LC_MESSAGES=, locale.LC_PAPER=, locale.LC_NAME=,
682 locale.LC_ADDRESS=, locale.LC_TELEPHONE=, locale.LC_MEASUREMENT=,
683 locale.LC_IDENTIFICATION=
684 Set the system locale to use. This overrides the settings in
685 /etc/locale.conf. For more information, see locale.conf(5) and
686 locale(7).
687
688 For other kernel command line parameters understood by components of
689 the core OS, please refer to kernel-command-line(7).
690
692 systemd is only very rarely invoked directly, since it is started early
693 and is already running by the time users may interact with it.
694 Normally, tools like systemctl(1) are used to give commands to the
695 manager. Since systemd is usually not invoked directly, the options
696 listed below are mostly useful for debugging and special purposes.
697
698 Introspection and debugging options
699 Those options are used for testing and introspection, and systemd may
700 be invoked with them at any time:
701
702 --dump-configuration-items
703 Dump understood unit configuration items. This outputs a terse but
704 complete list of configuration items understood in unit definition
705 files.
706
707 --dump-bus-properties
708 Dump exposed bus properties. This outputs a terse but complete list
709 of properties exposed on D-Bus.
710
711 --test
712 Determine the initial start-up transaction (i.e. the list of jobs
713 enqueued at start-up), dump it and exit — without actually
714 executing any of the determined jobs. This option is useful for
715 debugging only. Note that during regular service manager start-up
716 additional units not shown by this operation may be started,
717 because hardware, socket, bus or other kinds of activation might
718 add additional jobs as the transaction is executed. Use --system to
719 request the initial transaction of the system service manager (this
720 is also the implied default), combine with --user to request the
721 initial transaction of the per-user service manager instead.
722
723 --system, --user
724 When used in conjunction with --test, selects whether to calculate
725 the initial transaction for the system instance or for a per-user
726 instance. These options have no effect when invoked without --test,
727 as during regular (i.e. non---test) invocations the service manager
728 will automatically detect whether it shall operate in system or
729 per-user mode, by checking whether the PID it is run as is 1 or
730 not. Note that it is not supported booting and maintaining a system
731 with the service manager running in --system mode but with a PID
732 other than 1.
733
734 -h, --help
735 Print a short help text and exit.
736
737 --version
738 Print a short version string and exit.
739
740 Options that duplicate kernel command line settings
741 Those options correspond directly to options listed above in "Kernel
742 Command Line". Both forms may be used equivalently for the system
743 manager, but it is recommended to use the forms listed above in this
744 context, because they are properly namespaced. When an option is
745 specified both on the kernel command line, and as a normal command line
746 argument, the latter has higher precedence.
747
748 When systemd is used as a user manager, the kernel command line is
749 ignored and the options described are understood. Nevertheless, systemd
750 is usually started in this mode through the user@.service(5) service,
751 which is shared between all users, and it may be more convenient to use
752 configuration files to modify settings, see systemd-user.conf(5), or a
753 drop-in that specifies one of the environment variables listed above in
754 the Environment section, see systemd.unit(5).
755
756 --unit=
757 Set default unit to activate on startup. If not specified, defaults
758 to default.target. See systemd.unit= above.
759
760 --dump-core
761 Enable core dumping on crash. This switch has no effect when
762 running as user instance. Same as systemd.dump_core= above.
763
764 --crash-vt=VT
765 Switch to a specific virtual console (VT) on crash. This switch has
766 no effect when running as user instance. Same as
767 systemd.crash_chvt= above (but not the different spelling!).
768
769 --crash-shell
770 Run a shell on crash. This switch has no effect when running as
771 user instance. See systemd.crash_shell= above.
772
773 --crash-reboot
774 Automatically reboot the system on crash. This switch has no effect
775 when running as user instance. See systemd.crash_reboot above.
776
777 --confirm-spawn
778 Ask for confirmation when spawning processes. This switch has no
779 effect when run as user instance. See systemd.confirm_spawn above.
780
781 --show-status
782 Show terse unit status information on the console during boot-up
783 and shutdown. See systemd.show_status above.
784
785 --log-color
786 Highlight important log messages. See systemd.log_color above.
787
788 --log-level=
789 Set log level. See systemd.log_level above.
790
791 --log-location
792 Include code location in log messages. See systemd.log_location
793 above.
794
795 --log-target=
796 Set log target. See systemd.log_target above.
797
798 --log-time=
799 Prefix messages with timestamp. See systemd.log_time above.
800
801 --machine-id=
802 Override the machine-id set on the hard drive. See
803 systemd.machine_id= above.
804
805 --service-watchdogs
806 Globally enable/disable all service watchdog timeouts and emergency
807 actions. See systemd.service_watchdogs above.
808
809 --default-standard-output=, --default-standard-error=
810 Sets the default output or error output for all services and
811 sockets, respectively. See systemd.default_standard_output= and
812 systemd.default_standard_error= above.
813
815 /run/systemd/notify
816 Daemon status notification socket. This is an AF_UNIX datagram
817 socket and is used to implement the daemon notification logic as
818 implemented by sd_notify(3).
819
820 /run/systemd/private
821 Used internally as communication channel between systemctl(1) and
822 the systemd process. This is an AF_UNIX stream socket. This
823 interface is private to systemd and should not be used in external
824 projects.
825
826 /dev/initctl
827 Limited compatibility support for the SysV client interface, as
828 implemented by the systemd-initctl.service unit. This is a named
829 pipe in the file system. This interface is obsolete and should not
830 be used in new applications.
831
833 The systemd Homepage[11], systemd-system.conf(5), locale.conf(5),
834 systemctl(1), journalctl(1), systemd-notify(1), daemon(7), sd-
835 daemon(3), org.freedesktop.systemd1(5), systemd.unit(5),
836 systemd.special(7), pkg-config(1), kernel-command-line(7), bootup(7),
837 systemd.directives(7)
838
840 1. cgroups.txt
841 https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/cgroup-v1/cgroups.txt
842
843 2. Original Design Document
844 http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/systemd.html
845
846 3. Interface Portability and Stability Promise
847 [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/Portability and
848
849 4. Container Interface
850 https://systemd.io/CONTAINER_INTERFACE
851
852 5. initrd Interface
853 https://systemd.io/INITRD_INTERFACE/
854
855 6. XDG Base Directory specification
856 http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
857
858 7. Known Environment Variables
859 https://systemd.io/ENVIRONMENT
860
861 8. If run inside a Linux container these arguments may be passed as
862 command line arguments to systemd itself, next to any of the
863 command line options listed in the Options section above. If run
864 outside of Linux containers, these arguments are parsed from
865 /proc/cmdline instead.
866
867 9. unified cgroup hierarchy
868 https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/cgroup-v2.html
869
870 10. legacy cgroup hierarchy
871 https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/cgroup-v1/
872
873 11. systemd Homepage
874 https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/
875
876
877
878systemd 246 SYSTEMD(1)