From b9975629f03a43d4c6b14fdb42eb8dd5a30af28f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Lennart Poettering Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2010 02:11:38 +0200 Subject: man: extend man pages a little --- man/systemd.xml | 54 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 47 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) (limited to 'man/systemd.xml') diff --git a/man/systemd.xml b/man/systemd.xml index e74d71b126..25f24ce722 100644 --- a/man/systemd.xml +++ b/man/systemd.xml @@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ Tell systemd to run a system instance (resp. session instance), even if the process ID is - not 1 (resp. is 1), i.e. system is not + not 1 (resp. is 1), i.e. systemd is not (resp. is) run as init process. Normally it should not be necessary to pass these options, as systemd @@ -232,12 +232,23 @@ systemd.unit5, however some are created automatically from other configuration or dynamically from system state. Units - may be active (meaning started, bound, plugged in, ... - depending on the unit type), or inactive (meaning - stopped, unbound, unplugged, ...), as well as in the - process of being activated or deactivated, - i.e. between the two states. The following unit types - are available: + may be 'active' (meaning started, bound, plugged in, + ... depending on the unit type, see below), or + 'inactive' (meaning stopped, unbound, unplugged, ...), + as well as in the process of being activated or + deactivated, i.e. between the two states (these states + are called 'activating', 'deactivating'). A special + 'maintenance' state is available as well which is very + similar to 'inactive' and is entered when the service + failed in some way (process returned error code on + exit, or crashed, or an operation timed out). If this + state is entered the cause will be logged, for later + reference. Note that the various unit types may have a + number of additional substates, which are mapped to + the five generalized unit states described + here. + + The following unit types are available: Service units, which control @@ -304,6 +315,35 @@ list you may find in systemd.special7. + systemd knows various kinds of dependencies, + including positive and negative requirement + dependencies (i.e. Requires= and + Conflicts=) as well as ordering + dependencies (After= and + Before=). NB: ordering and + requirement dependencies are orthogonal. If only a + requirement dependency exists between two units + (e.g. foo.service requires + bar.service), but no ordering + dependency (e.g. foo.service + after bar.service) and both are + requested to start, they will be started in + parallel. It is a common pattern that both requirement + and ordering dependencies are placed between two + units. Also note that the majority of dependencies are + implicitly created and maintained by systemd. In most + cases it should be unnecessary to declare additional + dependencies manually, however it is possible to do + this. + + Application programs and units (via + dependencies) may requests state changes of units. In + systemd, these requests are encapsulated as 'jobs' and + maintained in a job queue. Jobs may succeed or can + fail, their execution is ordered based on the ordering + dependencies of the units they have been scheduled + for. + On boot systemd activates the target unit default.target whose job is to activate on-boot services and other on-boot units by -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf