Custom systemd Unit and Unit File: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
=Create the Unit File= | =Create the Unit File= | ||
Create the <code>/etc/systemd/system/minecraft.service</code> unit file. As root: | |||
Create the <code>/etc/systemd/system/minecraft.service</code> unit file. | |||
As root: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | ||
touch /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service | touch /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service | ||
chmod 644 /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service | chmod 644 /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
For more details on the location of the unit files, see: {{Internal|Systemd_Concepts#Unit_File_Location|systemd Concepts | Unit File Location}} | |||
=Configure the Unit File= | =Configure the Unit File= |
Revision as of 22:32, 19 August 2023
Internal
Overview
This article describes the procedure to configure an arbitrary service minecraft
to be managed by systemd
. It includes the creation of corresponding unit file and systemd
configuration to start and stop the service automatically at boot, respectively shutdown.
Create the Unit File
Create the /etc/systemd/system/minecraft.service
unit file. As root:
touch /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service
chmod 644 /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service
For more details on the location of the unit files, see:
Configure the Unit File
Process Started and Stopped by Auxiliary Scripts
[Unit] Description=MyService After=network.target [Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/opt/myservice/bin/myservice start ExecStop=/opt/myservice/bin/myservice stop RemainAfterExit=yes [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
For more details on the content of the unit files, see systemd Concepts - Unit File Structure.
Daemon Process that Forks and Creates Its Own PID File
[Unit] Description=MyService After=network.target [Service] ExecStart=/opt/myservice/bin/myservice Type=forking PIDFile=/var/run/myservice.pid [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
For more details on the content of the unit files, see systemd Concepts - Unit File Structure.
Notify systemd of the existence of the new unit file
systemctl daemon-reload
Enable at Boot
systemctl enable myservice.service
Exercise the Service
systemctl start myservice systemctl status hello systemctl restart hello systemctl stop hello