systemd.conf
systemd
Developer
Lennart
Poettering
lennart@poettering.net
systemd.conf
5
systemd.conf
systemd manager configuration file
system.conf
user.conf
Description
When run as system instance systemd reads the
configuration file system.conf,
otherwise user.conf. These
configuration files contain a few settings controlling
basic manager operations.
Options
All options are configured in the
[Manager] section:
LogLevel=
LogTarget=
LogColor=
LogLocation=
DumpCore=yes
CrashShell=no
ShowStatus=yes
SysVConsole=yes
CrashChVT=1
DefaultStandardOutput=journal
DefaultStandardError=inherit
Configures various
parameters of basic manager
operation. These options may be
overridden by the respective command
line arguments. See
systemd1
for details about these command line
arguments.
CPUAffinity=
Configures the initial
CPU affinity for the init
process. Takes a space-separated list
of CPU indexes.
MountAuto=yes
SwapAuto=yes
Configures whether
systemd should automatically activate
all swap or mounts listed in
/etc/fstab, or
whether this job is left to some other
system script.
DefaultControllers=cpu
Configures in which
cgroup controller hierarchies to
create per-service cgroups
automatically, in addition to the
name=systemd named hierarchy. Defaults
to 'cpu'. Takes a space separated list
of controller names. Pass an empty
string to ensure that systemd does not
touch any hierarchies but its
own.
JoinControllers=cpu,cpuacct
Configures controllers
that shall be mounted in a single
hierarchy. By default systemd will
mount all controllers which are
enabled in the kernel in individual
hierachies, with the exception of
those listed in this setting. Takes a
space separated list of comma
separated controller names, in order
to allow multiple joined
hierarchies. Defaults to
'cpu,cpuacct'. Pass an empty string to
ensure that systemd mounts all
controllers in separate
hierarchies.
RuntimeWatchdogSec=
ShutdownWatchdogSec=
Configure the hardware
watchdog at runtime and at
reboot. Takes a timeout value in
seconds (or in other time units if
suffixed with ms,
min,
h,
d,
w). If
RuntimeWatchdogSec=
is set to a non-zero value the
watchdog hardware
(/dev/watchdog)
will be programmed to automatically
reboot the system if it is not
contacted within the specified timeout
interval. The system manager will
ensure to contact it at least once in
half the specified timeout
interval. This feature requires a
hardware watchdog device to be
present, as it is commonly the case in
embedded and server systems. Not all
hardware watchdogs allow configuration
of the reboot timeout, in which case
the closest available timeout is
picked. ShutdownWatchdogSec=
may be used to configure the hardware
watchdog when the system is asked to
reboot. It works as a safety net to
ensure that the reboot takes place
even if a clean reboot attempt times
out. By default
RuntimeWatchdogSec=
defaults to 0 (off), and
ShutdownWatchdogSec=
to 10min. These settings have no
effect if a hardware watchdog is not
available.
See Also
systemd1