systemd-run systemd Developer Lennart Poettering lennart@poettering.net systemd-run 1 systemd-run Run programs in transient scope or service units systemd-run OPTIONS COMMAND ARGS Description systemd-run may be used to create and start a transient .service or a .scope unit and run the specified COMMAND in it. If a command is run as transient service unit, it will be started and managed by the service manager like any other service, and thus show up in the output of systemctl list-units like any other unit. It will run in a clean and detached execution environment. systemd-run will start the service asynchronously in the background and immediately return. If a command is run as transient scope unit, it will be started directly by systemd-run and thus inherit the execution environment of the caller. It is however managed by the service manager similar to normal services, and will also show up in the output of systemctl list-units. Execution in this case is synchronous, and execution will return only when the command finishes. Options The following options are understood: Create a transient .scope unit instead of the default transient .service unit. Use this unit name instead of an automatically generated one. Sets a unit property for the scope or service unit that is created. This takes an assignment in the same format as systemctl1's set-property command. Provide description for the unit. If not specified, the command itself will be used as a description. See Description= in systemd.unit5. Make the new .service or .scope unit part of the specified slice, instead of the system.slice. After the service's process has terminated, keep the service around until it is explicitly stopped. This is useful to collect runtime information about the service after it finished running. Also see RemainAfterExit= in systemd.service5. When terminating the scope unit, send a SIGHUP immediately after SIGTERM. This is useful to indicate to shells and shell-like processes that the connection has been severed. Also see SendSIGHUP= in systemd.kill5. All command-line arguments after the first non-option argument become part of the commandline of the launched process. If a command is run as service unit, its first argument needs to be an absolute binary path. Exit status On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. Examples The following command will log the environment variables provided by systemd to services: # systemd-run env Running as unit run-19945.service. # journalctl -u run-19945.service Sep 08 07:37:21 bupkis systemd[1]: Starting /usr/bin/env... Sep 08 07:37:21 bupkis systemd[1]: Started /usr/bin/env. Sep 08 07:37:21 bupkis env[19948]: PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin Sep 08 07:37:21 bupkis env[19948]: LANG=en_US.UTF-8 Sep 08 07:37:21 bupkis env[19948]: BOOT_IMAGE=/vmlinuz-3.11.0-0.rc5.git6.2.fc20.x86_64 The following command invokes the updatedb8 tool but lowers the block IO weight for it to 10. See systemd.resource-control5 for more information on the BlockIOWeight= property. # systemd-run -p BlockIOWeight=10 updatedb See Also systemd1, systemctl1, systemd.unit5, systemd.service5, systemd.scope5, systemd.slice5, systemd.exec5, systemd.resource-control5, machinectl1