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systemd
Introduction
systemd is a system and service manager for Linux, compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides aggressive parallelization capabilities, uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services, offers on-demand starting of daemons, keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups, supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state, maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in replacement for sysvinit.
Installation
Currently v11 is available from experimental and v12 is being worked on. systemd requires dbus from upstream, means you need dbus >=1.4.0, which can also be found in experimental. You have to enhance your sources.list and add experimental Distribution.
To install systemd (and dbus) from experimental:
# apt-get update # apt-get install -t experimental dbus systemd
Packages with native systemd support
dbus
(>=1.4.0-1)
experimental
supports socket activation
rsyslog
(>=5.7.1-1)
experimental
supports socket activation, run "systemctl enable rsyslog.service"
hal
(>=0.5.14-4)
experimental
support D-Bus activation
consolekit
(>=0.4.3-1)
unstable
supports D-Bus activation
avahi
(>=0.6.28-1)
experimental
avahi-daemon: supports socket and D-Bus activation, avahi-dnsconfd: started by multi-user.target. Run "systemctl enable avahi-daemon.service" resp. "systemctl enable avahi-dnsconfd.service".
Known Issues and Workarounds
- Issue #1: sysvinit vs. systemd-sysv
As sysvinit is default System-V-like init-system and has "Essential flag" set, it will always be preferred on dist-upgrades. For more Details see chapters "3.8 Essential packages" and "5.6.9 Essential"
Workaround #1 (preferred): Do not install systemd-sysv, enhance grub-line (Kernel command line) by "init=/bin/systemd". For a grub2 persistent solution (requires an update-grub to refresh /boot/grub/grub.cfg):
# $EDITOR /etc/default/grub GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet init=/bin/systemd" <--- Change this line # update-grub
Workaround #2: Install systemd-sysv and put package "on hold".
NOTE: systemd-sysv replaces sysvinit package and changes symlink like "/sbin/init -> /bin/systemd".
The problem with "Essential flag" needs some discussion with the sysvinit maintainer.
- Issue #2: agetty vs. getty
util-linux-ng has /sbin/agetty, Debian has renamed agetty to getty in its util-linux package (will be fixed for wheezy by Debian maintainer)
- Issue #3: libnotify-0.7
Upstream systemd >=v12 requires libnotify 0.7 - this needs a revert as it is not available in Debian yet
Use native mount
With v12 you can use native (means systemd's) mount by activating it in /etc/systemd/system.conf.
# egrep 'MountAuto|SwapAuto' /etc/systemd/system.conf Output: MountAuto=yes SwapAuto=yes
If you use LVM and your swap partition is on a LV, you need to use the actual device (/dev/dm-X) in /etc/fstab until the lvm2 package has been updated to properly work together with udev (603710)
Who is who?
Maintainer of the systemd package is Tollef Fog Heen (Mithrandir). Currently, it's discussed to get Michael Biebl (mbiebl) as co-maintainer. Michael and Sedat Dilek (dileks) contributed to the initial version of this wiki.
Where to get help?
As systemd is a very young project (see [1]), we would appreciate to use the existing upstream infrastructure like mailing-list [2], IRC and read Lennart's blog [3], etc. for following the development. Most people interested in systemd development (from diverse distributions) and Debian-specific packaging are around on IRC: #systemd (irc.freenode.net). Anyway, Debian-specific bugs should be sent to Debian-BTS (for example use report-bug tool).
[1] http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/systemd.html
[2] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
Known Bugs and Bug Tracking Systems
Future plans
- Be more user-friendly: For example setup a #debian-systemd IRC channel on OFTC (with v12 release?)
- Announcement to the Debian mailing-lists: 1. Inform there is sth. awesome 2. Join the systemd party (use it and report, contribute to packaging or even upstream)
- Fulfill "visions" as described in the presentation of Michael at LPC-2010 (see Resources)
Resources
Talk about systemd in Debian at Linux Plumbers Conference 2010 by Michael Biebl <biebl@debian.org>