systemd-shutdown
systemd
Developer
Lennart
Poettering
lennart@poettering.net
systemd-shutdown
8
systemd-shutdown
systemd-halt.service
systemd-poweroff.service
systemd-reboot.service
systemd-kexec.service
System shutdown logic
systemd-halt.service
systemd-poweroff.service
systemd-reboot.service
systemd-kexec.service
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-shutdown
/usr/lib/systemd/system-shutdown/
Description
systemd-halt.service is a system
service that is pulled in by halt.target and
is responsible for the actual system halt. Similarly,
systemd-poweroff.service is pulled in by
poweroff.target,
systemd-reboot.service by
reboot.target and
systemd-kexec.service by
kexec.target to execute the respective
actions.
When these services are run, they ensure that PID 1 is
replaced by the
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-shutdown tool which
is then responsible for the actual shutdown. Before shutting down,
this binary will try to unmount all remaining file systems,
disable all remaining swap devices, detach all remaining storage
devices and kill all remaining processes.
It is necessary to have this code in a separate binary
because otherwise rebooting after an upgrade might be broken — the
running PID 1 could still depend on libraries which are not
available any more, thus keeping the file system busy, which then
cannot be re-mounted read-only.
Immediately before executing the actual system
halt/poweroff/reboot/kexec systemd-shutdown
will run all executables in
/usr/lib/systemd/system-shutdown/ and pass
one arguments to them: either halt,
poweroff, reboot or
kexec, depending on the chosen action. All
executables in this directory are executed in parallel, and
execution of the action is not continued before all executables
finished.
Note that systemd-halt.service (and the
related units) should never be executed directly. Instead, trigger
system shutdown with a command such as systemctl
halt or suchlike.
See Also
systemd1,
systemctl1,
systemd.special7,
reboot2,
systemd-suspend.service8