| systemctl(1) - phpMan
SYSTEMCTL(1) systemctl SYSTEMCTL(1)
NAME
systemctl - Control the systemd system and service manager
SYNOPSIS
systemctl [OPTIONS...] COMMAND [NAME...]
DESCRIPTION
systemctl may be used to introspect and control the state of the systemd(1) system and
service manager.
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
-t, --type=
The argument should be a comma-separated list of unit types such as service and
socket.
If one of the arguments is a unit type, when listing units, limit display to certain
unit types. Otherwise, units of all types will be shown.
As a special case, if one of the arguments is help, a list of allowed values will be
printed and the program will exit.
--state=
The argument should be a comma-separated list of unit LOAD, SUB, or ACTIVE states.
When listing units, show only those in specified states.
-p, --property=
When showing unit/job/manager properties with the show command, limit display to
certain properties as specified as argument. If not specified, all set properties are
shown. The argument should be a comma-separated list of property names, such as
"MainPID". If specified more than once, all properties with the specified names are
shown.
-a, --all
When listing units, show all loaded units, regardless of their state, including
inactive units. When showing unit/job/manager properties, show all properties
regardless whether they are set or not.
To list all units installed on the system, use the list-unit-files command instead.
-r, --recursive
When listing units, also show units of local containers. Units of local containers
will be prefixed with the container name, separated by a single colon character (":").
--reverse
Show reverse dependencies between units with list-dependencies, i.e. units with
dependencies of type Wants= or Requires= on the given unit.
--after
With list-dependencies, show the units that are ordered before the specified unit. In
other words, list the units that are in the After= directive of the specified unit,
have the specified unit in their Before= directive, or are otherwise implicit
dependencies of the specified unit.
--before
With list-dependencies, show the units that are ordered after the specified unit. In
other words, list the units that are in the Before= directive of the specified unit,
have the specified unit in their After= directive, or otherwise depend on the
specified unit.
-l, --full
Do not ellipsize unit names, process tree entries, journal output, or truncate unit
descriptions in the output of status, list-units, list-jobs, and list-timers.
--show-types
When showing sockets, show the type of the socket.
--job-mode=
When queuing a new job, this option controls how to deal with already queued jobs. It
takes one of "fail", "replace", "replace-irreversibly", "isolate",
"ignore-dependencies", "ignore-requirements" or "flush". Defaults to "replace", except
when the isolate command is used which implies the "isolate" job mode.
If "fail" is specified and a requested operation conflicts with a pending job (more
specifically: causes an already pending start job to be reversed into a stop job or
vice versa), cause the operation to fail.
If "replace" (the default) is specified, any conflicting pending job will be replaced,
as necessary.
If "replace-irreversibly" is specified, operate like "replace", but also mark the new
jobs as irreversible. This prevents future conflicting transactions from replacing
these jobs (or even being enqueued while the irreversible jobs are still pending).
Irreversible jobs can still be cancelled using the cancel command.
"isolate" is only valid for start operations and causes all other units to be stopped
when the specified unit is started. This mode is always used when the isolate command
is used.
"flush" will cause all queued jobs to be canceled when the new job is enqueued.
If "ignore-dependencies" is specified, then all unit dependencies are ignored for this
new job and the operation is executed immediately. If passed, no required units of the
unit passed will be pulled in, and no ordering dependencies will be honored. This is
mostly a debugging and rescue tool for the administrator and should not be used by
applications.
"ignore-requirements" is similar to "ignore-dependencies", but only causes the
requirement dependencies to be ignored, the ordering dependencies will still be
honoured.
-i, --ignore-inhibitors
When system shutdown or a sleep state is requested, ignore inhibitor locks.
Applications can establish inhibitor locks to avoid that certain important operations
(such as CD burning or suchlike) are interrupted by system shutdown or a sleep state.
Any user may take these locks and privileged users may override these locks. If any
locks are taken, shutdown and sleep state requests will normally fail (regardless of
whether privileged or not) and a list of active locks is printed. However, if
--ignore-inhibitors is specified, the locks are ignored and not printed, and the
operation attempted anyway, possibly requiring additional privileges.
-q, --quiet
Suppress output to standard output in snapshot, is-active, is-failed, is-enabled,
is-system-running, enable and disable.
--no-block
Do not synchronously wait for the requested operation to finish. If this is not
specified, the job will be verified, enqueued and systemctl will wait until it is
completed. By passing this argument, it is only verified and enqueued.
--no-legend
Do not print the legend, i.e. the column headers and the footer with hints.
--user
Talk to the service manager of the calling user, rather than the service manager of
the system.
--system
Talk to the service manager of the system. This is the implied default.
--failed
List units in failed state. This is equivalent to --state=failed.
--no-wall
Do not send wall message before halt, power-off, reboot.
--global
When used with enable and disable, operate on the global user configuration directory,
thus enabling or disabling a unit file globally for all future logins of all users.
--no-reload
When used with enable and disable, do not implicitly reload daemon configuration after
executing the changes.
--no-ask-password
When used with start and related commands, disables asking for passwords. Background
services may require input of a password or passphrase string, for example to unlock
system hard disks or cryptographic certificates. Unless this option is specified and
the command is invoked from a terminal, systemctl will query the user on the terminal
for the necessary secrets. Use this option to switch this behavior off. In this case,
the password must be supplied by some other means (for example graphical password
agents) or the service might fail. This also disables querying the user for
authentication for privileged operations.
--kill-who=
When used with kill, choose which processes to send a signal to. Must be one of main,
control or all to select whether to kill only the main process, the control process or
all processes of the unit. The main process of the unit is the one that defines the
life-time of it. A control process of a unit is one that is invoked by the manager to
induce state changes of it. For example, all processes started due to the
ExecStartPre=, ExecStop= or ExecReload= settings of service units are control
processes. Note that there is only one control process per unit at a time, as only one
state change is executed at a time. For services of type Type=forking, the initial
process started by the manager for ExecStart= is a control process, while the process
ultimately forked off by that one is then considered the main process of the unit (if
it can be determined). This is different for service units of other types, where the
process forked off by the manager for ExecStart= is always the main process itself. A
service unit consists of zero or one main process, zero or one control process plus
any number of additional processes. Not all unit types manage processes of these types
however. For example, for mount units, control processes are defined (which are the
invocations of /bin/mount and /bin/umount), but no main process is defined. If
omitted, defaults to all.
-s, --signal=
When used with kill, choose which signal to send to selected processes. Must be one of
the well known signal specifiers such as SIGTERM, SIGINT or SIGSTOP. If omitted,
defaults to SIGTERM.
-f, --force
When used with enable, overwrite any existing conflicting symlinks.
When used with halt, poweroff, reboot or kexec, execute the selected operation without
shutting down all units. However, all processes will be killed forcibly and all file
systems are unmounted or remounted read-only. This is hence a drastic but relatively
safe option to request an immediate reboot. If --force is specified twice for these
operations, they will be executed immediately without terminating any processes or
unmounting any file systems. Warning: specifying --force twice with any of these
operations might result in data loss.
--root=
When used with enable/disable/is-enabled (and related commands), use alternative root
path when looking for unit files.
--runtime
When used with enable, disable, (and related commands), make changes only temporarily,
so that they are lost on the next reboot. This will have the effect that changes are
not made in subdirectories of /etc but in /run, with identical immediate effects,
however, since the latter is lost on reboot, the changes are lost too.
Similarly, when used with set-property, make changes only temporarily, so that they
are lost on the next reboot.
--preset-mode=
Takes one of "full" (the default), "enable-only", "disable-only". When used with the
preset or preset-all commands, controls whether units shall be disabled and enabled
according to the preset rules, or only enabled, or only disabled.
-n, --lines=
When used with status, controls the number of journal lines to show, counting from the
most recent ones. Takes a positive integer argument. Defaults to 10.
-o, --output=
When used with status, controls the formatting of the journal entries that are shown.
For the available choices, see journalctl(1). Defaults to "short".
--plain
When used with list-dependencies, the output is printed as a list instead of a tree.
-H, --host=
Execute the operation remotely. Specify a hostname, or a username and hostname
separated by "@", to connect to. The hostname may optionally be suffixed by a
container name, separated by ":", which connects directly to a specific container on
the specified host. This will use SSH to talk to the remote machine manager instance.
Container names may be enumerated with machinectl -H HOST.
-M, --machine=
Execute operation on a local container. Specify a container name to connect to.
-h, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
--version
Print a short version string and exit.
--no-pager
Do not pipe output into a pager.
COMMANDS
The following commands are understood:
Unit Commands
list-units [PATTERN...]
List known units (subject to limitations specified with -t). If one or more PATTERNs
are specified, only units matching one of them are shown.
This is the default command.
list-sockets [PATTERN...]
List socket units ordered by listening address. If one or more PATTERNs are specified,
only socket units matching one of them are shown. Produces output similar to
LISTEN UNIT ACTIVATES
/dev/initctl systemd-initctl.socket systemd-initctl.service
...
[::]:22 sshd.socket sshd.service
kobject-uevent 1 systemd-udevd-kernel.socket systemd-udevd.service
5 sockets listed.
Note: because the addresses might contains spaces, this output is not suitable for
programmatic consumption.
See also the options --show-types, --all, and --failed.
list-timers [PATTERN...]
List timer units ordered by the time they elapse next. If one or more PATTERNs are
specified, only units matching one of them are shown.
See also the options --all and --failed.
start PATTERN...
Start (activate) one or more units specified on the command line.
Note that glob patterns operate on a list of currently loaded units. Units which are
not active and are not in a failed state usually are not loaded, and would not be
matched by any pattern. In addition, in case of instantiated units, systemd is often
unaware of the instance name until the instance has been started. Therefore, using
glob patterns with start has limited usefulness.
stop PATTERN...
Stop (deactivate) one or more units specified on the command line.
reload PATTERN...
Asks all units listed on the command line to reload their configuration. Note that
this will reload the service-specific configuration, not the unit configuration file
of systemd. If you want systemd to reload the configuration file of a unit, use the
daemon-reload command. In other words: for the example case of Apache, this will
reload Apache's httpd.conf in the web server, not the apache.service systemd unit
file.
This command should not be confused with the daemon-reload or load commands.
restart PATTERN...
Restart one or more units specified on the command line. If the units are not running
yet, they will be started.
try-restart PATTERN...
Restart one or more units specified on the command line if the units are running. This
does nothing if units are not running. Note that, for compatibility with Red Hat init
scripts, condrestart is equivalent to this command.
reload-or-restart PATTERN...
Reload one or more units if they support it. If not, restart them instead. If the
units are not running yet, they will be started.
reload-or-try-restart PATTERN...
Reload one or more units if they support it. If not, restart them instead. This does
nothing if the units are not running. Note that, for compatibility with SysV init
scripts, force-reload is equivalent to this command.
isolate NAME
Start the unit specified on the command line and its dependencies and stop all others.
This is similar to changing the runlevel in a traditional init system. The isolate
command will immediately stop processes that are not enabled in the new unit, possibly
including the graphical environment or terminal you are currently using.
Note that this is allowed only on units where AllowIsolate= is enabled. See
systemd.unit(5) for details.
kill PATTERN...
Send a signal to one or more processes of the unit. Use --kill-who= to select which
process to kill. Use --signal= to select the signal to send.
is-active PATTERN...
Check whether any of the specified units are active (i.e. running). Returns an exit
code 0 if at least one is active, or non-zero otherwise. Unless --quiet is specified,
this will also print the current unit state to standard output.
is-failed PATTERN...
Check whether any of the specified units are in a "failed" state. Returns an exit code
0 if at least one has failed, non-zero otherwise. Unless --quiet is specified, this
will also print the current unit state to standard output.
status [PATTERN...|PID...]]
Show terse runtime status information about one or more units, followed by most recent
log data from the journal. If no units are specified, show system status. If combined
with --all, also show the status of all units (subject to limitations specified with
-t). If a PID is passed, show information about the unit the process belongs to.
This function is intended to generate human-readable output. If you are looking for
computer-parsable output, use show instead. By default this function only shows 10
lines of output and ellipsizes lines to fit in the terminal window. This can be
changes with --lines and --full, see above. In addition, journalctl --unit=NAME or
journalctl --user-unit=NAME use a similar filter for messages and might be more
convenient.
show [PATTERN...|JOB...]
Show properties of one or more units, jobs, or the manager itself. If no argument is
specified, properties of the manager will be shown. If a unit name is specified,
properties of the unit is shown, and if a job id is specified, properties of the job
is shown. By default, empty properties are suppressed. Use --all to show those too. To
select specific properties to show, use --property=. This command is intended to be
used whenever computer-parsable output is required. Use status if you are looking for
formatted human-readable output.
cat PATTERN...
Show backing files of one or more units. Prints the "fragment" and "drop-ins" (source
files) of units. Each file is preceded by a comment which includes the file name.
set-property NAME ASSIGNMENT...
Set the specified unit properties at runtime where this is supported. This allows
changing configuration parameter properties such as resource control settings at
runtime. Not all properties may be changed at runtime, but many resource control
settings (primarily those in systemd.resource-control(5)) may. The changes are applied
instantly, and stored on disk for future boots, unless --runtime is passed, in which
case the settings only apply until the next reboot. The syntax of the property
assignment follows closely the syntax of assignments in unit files.
Example: systemctl set-property foobar.service CPUShares=777
Note that this command allows changing multiple properties at the same time, which is
preferable over setting them individually. Like unit file configuration settings,
assigning the empty list to list parameters will reset the list.
help PATTERN...|PID...
Show manual pages for one or more units, if available. If a PID is given, the manual
pages for the unit the process belongs to are shown.
reset-failed [PATTERN...]
Reset the "failed" state of the specified units, or if no unit name is passed, reset
the state of all units. When a unit fails in some way (i.e. process exiting with
non-zero error code, terminating abnormally or timing out), it will automatically
enter the "failed" state and its exit code and status is recorded for introspection by
the administrator until the service is restarted or reset with this command.
list-dependencies NAME
Shows required and wanted units of the specified unit. If no unit is specified,
default.target is implied. Target units are recursively expanded. When --all is
passed, all other units are recursively expanded as well.
Unit File Commands
list-unit-files [PATTERN...]
List installed unit files. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only units whose
filename (just the last component of the path) matches one of them are shown.
enable NAME...
Enable one or more unit files or unit file instances, as specified on the command
line. This will create a number of symlinks as encoded in the "[Install]" sections of
the unit files. After the symlinks have been created, the systemd configuration is
reloaded (in a way that is equivalent to daemon-reload) to ensure the changes are
taken into account immediately. Note that this does not have the effect of also
starting any of the units being enabled. If this is desired, a separate start command
must be invoked for the unit. Also note that in case of instance enablement, symlinks
named the same as instances are created in the install location, however they all
point to the same template unit file.
This command will print the actions executed. This output may be suppressed by passing
--quiet.
Note that this operation creates only the suggested symlinks for the units. While this
command is the recommended way to manipulate the unit configuration directory, the
administrator is free to make additional changes manually by placing or removing
symlinks in the directory. This is particularly useful to create configurations that
deviate from the suggested default installation. In this case, the administrator must
make sure to invoke daemon-reload manually as necessary to ensure the changes are
taken into account.
Enabling units should not be confused with starting (activating) units, as done by the
start command. Enabling and starting units is orthogonal: units may be enabled without
being started and started without being enabled. Enabling simply hooks the unit into
various suggested places (for example, so that the unit is automatically started on
boot or when a particular kind of hardware is plugged in). Starting actually spawns
the daemon process (in case of service units), or binds the socket (in case of socket
units), and so on.
Depending on whether --system, --user, --runtime, or --global is specified, this
enables the unit for the system, for the calling user only, for only this boot of the
system, or for all future logins of all users, or only this boot. Note that in the
last case, no systemd daemon configuration is reloaded.
disable NAME...
Disables one or more units. This removes all symlinks to the specified unit files from
the unit configuration directory, and hence undoes the changes made by enable. Note
however that this removes all symlinks to the unit files (i.e. including manual
additions), not just those actually created by enable. This call implicitly reloads
the systemd daemon configuration after completing the disabling of the units. Note
that this command does not implicitly stop the units that are being disabled. If this
is desired, an additional stop command should be executed afterwards.
This command will print the actions executed. This output may be suppressed by passing
--quiet.
This command honors --system, --user, --runtime and --global in a similar way as
enable.
is-enabled NAME...
Checks whether any of the specified unit files are enabled (as with enable). Returns
an exit code of 0 if at least one is enabled, non-zero otherwise. Prints the current
enable status (see table). To suppress this output, use --quiet.
Table 1. is-enabled output
┌──────────────────┬──────────────────────────┬──────────────┐
│Printed string │ Meaning │ Return value │
├──────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────┤
│"enabled" │ Enabled through a │ │
├──────────────────┤ symlink in .wants │ 0 │
│"enabled-runtime" │ directory (permanently │ │
│ │ or just in /run) │ │
├──────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────┤
│"linked" │ Made available through a │ │
├──────────────────┤ symlink to the unit file │ 1 │
│"linked-runtime" │ (permanently or just in │ │
│ │ /run) │ │
├──────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────┤
│"masked" │ Disabled entirely │ │
├──────────────────┤ (permanently or just in │ 1 │
│"masked-runtime" │ /run) │ │
├──────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────┤
│"static" │ Unit is not enabled, but │ 0 │
│ │ has no provisions for │ │
│ │ enabling in [Install] │ │
│ │ section │ │
├──────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────┤
│"disabled" │ Unit is not enabled │ 1 │
└──────────────────┴──────────────────────────┴──────────────┘
reenable NAME...
Reenable one or more unit files, as specified on the command line. This is a
combination of disable and enable and is useful to reset the symlinks a unit is
enabled with to the defaults configured in the "[Install]" section of the unit file.
preset NAME...
Reset one or more unit files, as specified on the command line, to the defaults
configured in the preset policy files. This has the same effect as disable or enable,
depending how the unit is listed in the preset files.
Use --preset-mode= to control whether units shall be enabled and disabled, or only
enabled, or only disabled.
For more information on the preset policy format, see systemd.preset(5). For more
information on the concept of presets, please consult the Preset[1] document.
preset-all
Resets all installed unit files to the defaults configured in the preset policy file
(see above).
Use --preset-mode= to control whether units shall be enabled and disabled, or only
enabled, or only disabled.
mask NAME...
Mask one or more unit files, as specified on the command line. This will link these
units to /dev/null, making it impossible to start them. This is a stronger version of
disable, since it prohibits all kinds of activation of the unit, including manual
activation. Use this option with care. This honors the --runtime option to only mask
temporarily until the next reboot of the system.
unmask NAME...
Unmask one or more unit files, as specified on the command line. This will undo the
effect of mask.
link FILENAME...
Link a unit file that is not in the unit file search paths into the unit file search
path. This requires an absolute path to a unit file. The effect of this can be undone
with disable. The effect of this command is that a unit file is available for start
and other commands although it is not installed directly in the unit search path.
get-default
Get the default target specified via default.target link.
set-default NAME
Set the default target to boot into. Command links default.target to the given unit.
Machine Commands
list-machines [PATTERN...]
List the host and all running local containers with their state. If one or more
PATTERNs are specified, only containers matching one of them are shown.
Job Commands
list-jobs [PATTERN...]
List jobs that are in progress. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only jobs for
units matching one of them are shown.
cancel JOB...
Cancel one or more jobs specified on the command line by their numeric job IDs. If no
job ID is specified, cancel all pending jobs.
Snapshot Commands
snapshot [NAME]
Create a snapshot. If a snapshot name is specified, the new snapshot will be named
after it. If none is specified, an automatic snapshot name is generated. In either
case, the snapshot name used is printed to standard output, unless --quiet is
specified.
A snapshot refers to a saved state of the systemd manager. It is implemented itself as
a unit that is generated dynamically with this command and has dependencies on all
units active at the time. At a later time, the user may return to this state by using
the isolate command on the snapshot unit.
Snapshots are only useful for saving and restoring which units are running or are
stopped, they do not save/restore any other state. Snapshots are dynamic and lost on
reboot.
delete PATTERN...
Remove a snapshot previously created with snapshot.
Environment Commands
show-environment
Dump the systemd manager environment block. The environment block will be dumped in
straight-forward form suitable for sourcing into a shell script. This environment
block will be passed to all processes the manager spawns.
set-environment VARIABLE=VALUE...
Set one or more systemd manager environment variables, as specified on the command
line.
unset-environment VARIABLE...
Unset one or more systemd manager environment variables. If only a variable name is
specified, it will be removed regardless of its value. If a variable and a value are
specified, the variable is only removed if it has the specified value.
import-environment VARIABLE...
Import all, one or more environment variables set on the client into the systemd
manager environment block. If no arguments are passed, the entire environment block is
imported. Otherwise, a list of one or more environment variable names should be
passed, whose client-side values are then imported into the manager's environment
block.
Manager Lifecycle Commands
daemon-reload
Reload systemd manager configuration. This will reload all unit files and recreate the
entire dependency tree. While the daemon is being reloaded, all sockets systemd
listens on on behalf of user configuration will stay accessible.
This command should not be confused with the load or reload commands.
daemon-reexec
Reexecute the systemd manager. This will serialize the manager state, reexecute the
process and deserialize the state again. This command is of little use except for
debugging and package upgrades. Sometimes, it might be helpful as a heavy-weight
daemon-reload. While the daemon is being reexecuted, all sockets systemd listening on
behalf of user configuration will stay accessible.
System Commands
is-system-running
Checks whether the system is running. This returns success when the system is fully up
and running, meaning not in startup, shutdown or maintainance mode. Failure is
returned otherwise. In addition, the current state is printed in a short string to
standard output. Use --quiet to suppress output of this state string.
default
Enter default mode. This is mostly equivalent to isolate default.target.
rescue
Enter rescue mode. This is mostly equivalent to isolate rescue.target, but also prints
a wall message to all users.
emergency
Enter emergency mode. This is mostly equivalent to isolate emergency.target, but also
prints a wall message to all users.
halt
Shut down and halt the system. This is mostly equivalent to start halt.target
--irreversible, but also prints a wall message to all users. If combined with --force,
shutdown of all running services is skipped, however all processes are killed and all
file systems are unmounted or mounted read-only, immediately followed by the system
halt. If --force is specified twice, the operation is immediately executed without
terminating any processes or unmounting any file systems. This may result in data
loss.
poweroff
Shut down and power-off the system. This is mostly equivalent to start poweroff.target
--irreversible, but also prints a wall message to all users. If combined with --force,
shutdown of all running services is skipped, however all processes are killed and all
file systems are unmounted or mounted read-only, immediately followed by the powering
off. If --force is specified twice, the operation is immediately executed without
terminating any processes or unmounting any file systems. This may result in data
loss.
reboot [arg]
Shut down and reboot the system. This is mostly equivalent to start reboot.target
--irreversible, but also prints a wall message to all users. If combined with --force,
shutdown of all running services is skipped, however all processes are killed and all
file systems are unmounted or mounted read-only, immediately followed by the reboot.
If --force is specified twice, the operation is immediately executed without
terminating any processes or unmounting any file systems. This may result in data
loss.
If the optional argument arg is given, it will be passed as the optional argument to
the reboot(2) system call. The value is architecture and firmware specific. As an
example, "recovery" might be used to trigger system recovery, and "fota" might be used
to trigger a “firmware over the air” update.
kexec
Shut down and reboot the system via kexec. This is mostly equivalent to start
kexec.target --irreversible, but also prints a wall message to all users. If combined
with --force, shutdown of all running services is skipped, however all processes are
killed and all file systems are unmounted or mounted read-only, immediately followed
by the reboot.
exit
Ask the systemd manager to quit. This is only supported for user service managers
(i.e. in conjunction with the --user option) and will fail otherwise.
suspend
Suspend the system. This will trigger activation of the special suspend.target target.
hibernate
Hibernate the system. This will trigger activation of the special hibernate.target
target.
hybrid-sleep
Hibernate and suspend the system. This will trigger activation of the special
hybrid-sleep.target target.
switch-root ROOT [INIT]
Switches to a different root directory and executes a new system manager process below
it. This is intended for usage in initial RAM disks ("initrd"), and will transition
from the initrd's system manager process (a.k.a "init" process) to the main system
manager process. This call takes two arguments: the directory that is to become the
new root directory, and the path to the new system manager binary below it to execute
as PID 1. If the latter is omitted or the empty string, a systemd binary will
automatically be searched for and used as init. If the system manager path is omitted
or equal to the empty string, the state of the initrd's system manager process is
passed to the main system manager, which allows later introspection of the state of
the services involved in the initrd boot.
Parameter Syntax
Unit commands listed above take either a single unit name (designated as NAME), or
multiple unit specifications (designated as PATTERN...). In the first case, the unit name
with or without a suffix must be given. If the suffix is not specified, systemctl will
append a suitable suffix, ".service" by default, and a type-specific suffix in case of
commands which operate only on specific unit types. For example,
# systemctl start sshd
and
# systemctl start sshd.service
are equivalent, as are
# systemctl isolate snapshot-11
and
# systemctl isolate snapshot-11.snapshot
Note that (absolute) paths to device nodes are automatically converted to device unit
names, and other (absolute) paths to mount unit names.
# systemctl status /dev/sda
# systemctl status /home
are equivalent to:
# systemctl status dev-sda.device
# systemctl status home.mount
In the second case, shell-style globs will be matched against currently loaded units;
literal unit names, with or without a suffix, will be treated as in the first case. This
means that literal unit names always refer to exactly one unit, but globs may match zero
units and this is not considered an error.
Glob patterns use fnmatch(3), so normal shell-style globbing rules are used, and "*", "?",
"[]" may be used. See glob(7) for more details. The patterns are matched against the names
of currently loaded units, and patterns which do not match anything are silently skipped.
For example:
# systemctl stop sshd@*.service
will stop all sshd@.service instances.
For unit file commands, the specified NAME should be the full name of the unit file, or
the absolute path to the unit file:
# systemctl enable foo.service
or
# systemctl link /path/to/foo.service
EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.
ENVIRONMENT
$SYSTEMD_PAGER
Pager to use when --no-pager is not given; overrides $PAGER. Setting this to an empty
string or the value "cat" is equivalent to passing --no-pager.
$SYSTEMD_LESS
Override the default options passed to less ("FRSXMK").
SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemadm(1), journalctl(1), loginctl(1), systemd.unit(5), systemd.resource-
management(5), systemd.special(7), wall(1), systemd.preset(5)glob(7)
NOTES
1. Preset
http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/Preset
systemd 215 SYSTEMCTL(1)
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