systemctl(1) — Linux manual page

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SYSTEMCTL(1) systemctl SYSTEMCTL(1)

NAME top

 systemctl - Control the systemd system and service manager

SYNOPSIS top

 systemctl [OPTIONS...] COMMAND [UNIT...]

DESCRIPTION top

 systemctl may be used to introspect and control the state of the
 "systemd" system and service manager. Please refer to systemd(1)
 for an introduction into the basic concepts and functionality this
 tool manages.

COMMANDS top

 The following commands are understood:
 Unit Commands (Introspection and Modification)
 list-units [PATTERN...]
 List units that systemd currently has in memory. This includes
 units that are either referenced directly or through a
 dependency, units that are pinned by applications
 programmatically, or units that were active in the past and
 have failed. By default, only units which are active, have
 pending jobs, or have failed are shown; this can be changed
 with option --all. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only
 units matching one of them are shown. The units that are shown
 are additionally filtered by --type= and --state= if those
 options are specified.
 Note that this command does not show unit templates, but only
 instances of unit templates. Units templates that are not
 instantiated are not runnable, and will thus never show up in
 the output of this command. Specifically this means that
 foo@.service will never be shown in this list — unless
 instantiated, e.g. as foo@bar.service. Use list-unit-files
 (see below) for listing installed unit template files.
 Produces output similar to
 UNIT LOAD ACTIVE SUB DESCRIPTION
 sys-module-fuse.device loaded active plugged /sys/module/fuse
 -.mount loaded active mounted Root Mount
 boot-efi.mount loaded active mounted /boot/efi
 systemd-journald.service loaded active running Journal Service
 systemd-logind.service loaded active running Login Service
 くろまる user@1000.service loaded failed failed User Manager for UID 1000
 ...
 systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer loaded active waiting Daily Cleanup of Temporary Directories
 LOAD = Reflects whether the unit definition was properly loaded.
 ACTIVE = The high-level unit activation state, i.e. generalization of SUB.
 SUB = The low-level unit activation state, values depend on unit type.
 123 loaded units listed. Pass --all to see loaded but inactive units, too.
 To show all installed unit files use 'systemctl list-unit-files'.
 The header and the last unit of a given type are underlined if
 the terminal supports that. A colored dot is shown next to
 services which were masked, not found, or otherwise failed.
 The LOAD column shows the load state, one of loaded,
 not-found, bad-setting, error, masked. The ACTIVE columns
 shows the general unit state, one of the following:
 Table 1. Unit ACTIVE states
 ┌──────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
 │ State Description │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ active │ Started, bound, plugged │
 │ │ in, ..., depending on │
 │ │ the unit type. │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ inactive │ Stopped, unbound, │
 │ │ unplugged, ..., │
 │ │ depending on the unit │
 │ │ type. │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ failed │ Similar to inactive, but │
 │ │ the unit failed in some │
 │ │ way (process returned │
 │ │ error code on exit, │
 │ │ crashed, an operation │
 │ │ timed out, or after too │
 │ │ many restarts). │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ activating │ Changing from inactive │
 │ │ to active. │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ deactivating │ Changing from active to │
 │ │ inactive. │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ maintenance │ Unit is inactive and a │
 │ │ maintenance operation is │
 │ │ in progress. │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ reloading │ Unit is active and it is │
 │ │ reloading its │
 │ │ configuration. │
 ├──────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
 │ refreshing │ Unit is active and a new │
 │ │ mount is being activated │
 │ │ in its namespace. │
 └──────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
 The SUB column shows the unit-type-specific detailed state of
 the unit, possible values vary by unit type. The list of
 possible LOAD, ACTIVE, and SUB states is not constant and new
 systemd releases may both add and remove values.
 systemctl --state=help
 command may be used to display the current set of possible
 values.
 This is the default command.
 list-automounts [PATTERN...]
 List automount units currently in memory, ordered by mount
 path. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only automount
 units matching one of them are shown. Produces output similar
 to
 WHAT WHERE MOUNTED IDLE TIMEOUT UNIT
 /dev/sdb1 /mnt/test no 120s mnt-test.automount
 binfmt_misc /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc yes 0 proc-sys-fs-binfmt_misc.automount
 2 automounts listed.
 Also see --show-types, --all, and --state=.
 Added in version 252.
 list-paths [PATTERN...]
 List path units currently in memory, ordered by path. If one
 or more PATTERNs are specified, only path units matching one
 of them are shown. Produces output similar to
 PATH CONDITION UNIT ACTIVATES
 /run/systemd/ask-password DirectoryNotEmpty systemd-ask-password-plymouth.path systemd-ask-password-plymouth.service
 /run/systemd/ask-password DirectoryNotEmpty systemd-ask-password-wall.path systemd-ask-password-wall.service
 /var/cache/cups/org.cups.cupsd PathExists cups.path cups.service
 3 paths listed.
 Also see --show-types, --all, and --state=.
 Added in version 254.
 list-sockets [PATTERN...]
 List socket units currently in memory, ordered by listening
 address. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only socket
 units matching one of them are shown. Produces output similar
 to
 LISTEN UNIT ACTIVATES
 kobject-uevent 1 systemd-udevd-kernel.socket systemd-udevd.service
 /dev/rfkill systemd-rfkill.socket systemd-rfkill.service
 ...
 5 sockets listed.
 Note: because the addresses might contains spaces, this output
 is not suitable for programmatic consumption.
 Also see --show-types, --all, and --state=.
 Added in version 202.
 list-timers [PATTERN...]
 List timer units currently in memory, ordered by the time they
 elapse next. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only units
 matching one of them are shown. Produces output similar to
 NEXT LEFT LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES
 - - Thu 2017年02月23日 13:40:29 EST 3 days ago ureadahead-stop.timer ureadahead-stop.service
 Sun 2017年02月26日 18:55:42 EST 1min 14s left Thu 2017年02月23日 13:54:44 EST 3 days ago systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer systemd-tmpfiles-clean.service
 Sun 2017年02月26日 20:37:16 EST 1h 42min left Sun 2017年02月26日 11:56:36 EST 6h ago apt-daily.timer apt-daily.service
 Sun 2017年02月26日 20:57:49 EST 2h 3min left Sun 2017年02月26日 11:56:36 EST 6h ago snapd.refresh.timer snapd.refresh.service
 NEXT shows the next time the timer will run.
 LEFT shows how long till the next time the timer runs.
 LAST shows the last time the timer ran.
 PASSED shows how long has passed since the timer last ran.
 UNIT shows the name of the timer
 ACTIVATES shows the name the service the timer activates when
 it runs.
 Also see --all and --state=.
 Added in version 209.
 is-active PATTERN...
 Check whether any of the specified units are active (i.e.
 running). Returns an exit code 0 if at least one is active, or
 non-zero otherwise. Unless --quiet is specified, this will
 also print the current unit state to standard output.
 is-failed [PATTERN...]
 Check whether any of the specified units is in the "failed"
 state. If no unit is specified, check whether there are any
 failed units, which corresponds to the "degraded" state
 returned by is-system-running. Returns an exit code 0 if at
 least one has failed, non-zero otherwise. Unless --quiet is
 specified, this will also print the current unit or system
 state to standard output.
 Added in version 197.
 status [PATTERN...|PID...]]
 Show runtime status information about the whole system or
 about one or more units followed by most recent log data from
 the journal. If no positional arguments are specified, and no
 unit filter is given with --type=, --state=, or --failed,
 shows the status of the whole system. If combined with --all,
 follows that with the status of all units. If positional
 arguments are specified, each positional argument is treated
 as either a unit name to show, or a glob pattern to show units
 whose names match that pattern, or a PID to show the unit
 containing that PID. When --type=, --state=, or --failed are
 used, units are additionally filtered by the TYPE and ACTIVE
 state.
 This function is intended to generate human-readable output.
 If you are looking for computer-parsable output, use show
 instead. By default, this function only shows 10 lines of
 output and ellipsizes lines to fit in the terminal window.
 This can be changed with --lines and --full, see above. In
 addition, journalctl --unit=NAME or journalctl
 --user-unit=NAME use a similar filter for messages and might
 be more convenient.
 Note that this operation only displays runtime status, i.e.
 information about the current invocation of the unit (if it is
 running) or the most recent invocation (if it is not running
 anymore, and has not been released from memory). Information
 about earlier invocations, invocations from previous system
 boots, or prior invocations that have already been released
 from memory may be retrieved via journalctl --unit=.
 systemd implicitly loads units as necessary, so just running
 the status will attempt to load a file. The command is thus
 not useful for determining if something was already loaded or
 not. The units may possibly also be quickly unloaded after the
 operation is completed if there's no reason to keep it in
 memory thereafter.
 Example 1. Example output from systemctl status
 $ systemctl status bluetooth
 くろまる bluetooth.service - Bluetooth service
 Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service; enabled; preset: enabled)
 Active: active (running) since Wed 2017年01月04日 13:54:04 EST; 1 weeks 0 days ago
 Docs: man:bluetoothd(8)
 Main PID: 930 (bluetoothd)
 Status: "Running"
 Tasks: 1
 Memory: 648.0K
 CPU: 435ms
 CGroup: /system.slice/bluetooth.service
 └─930 /usr/lib/bluetooth/bluetoothd
 Jan 12 10:46:45 example.com bluetoothd[8900]: Not enough free handles to register service
 Jan 12 10:46:45 example.com bluetoothd[8900]: Current Time Service could not be registered
 Jan 12 10:46:45 example.com bluetoothd[8900]: gatt-time-server: Input/output error (5)
 The dot ("くろまる") uses color on supported terminals to summarize
 the unit state at a glance. Along with its color, its shape
 varies according to its state: "inactive" or "maintenance" is
 a white circle ("しろまる"), "active" is a green dot ("くろまる"),
 "deactivating" is a white dot, "failed" or "error" is a red
 cross ("×ばつ"), and "reloading" or "refreshing" is a green
 clockwise circle arrow ("↻").
 The "Loaded:" line in the output will show "loaded" if the
 unit has been loaded into memory. Other possible values for
 "Loaded:" include: "error" if there was a problem loading it,
 "not-found" if no unit file was found for this unit,
 "bad-setting" if an essential unit file setting could not be
 parsed and "masked" if the unit file has been masked. Along
 with showing the path to the unit file, this line will also
 show the enablement state. Enabled units are included in the
 dependency network between units, and thus are started at boot
 or via some other form of activation. See the full table of
 possible enablement states — including the definition of
 "masked" — in the documentation for the is-enabled command.
 The "Active:" line shows active state. The value is usually
 "active" or "inactive". Active could mean started, bound,
 plugged in, etc depending on the unit type. The unit could
 also be in process of changing states, reporting a state of
 "activating" or "deactivating". A special "failed" state is
 entered when the service failed in some way, such as a crash,
 exiting with an error code or timing out. If the failed state
 is entered the cause will be logged for later reference.
 show [PATTERN...|JOB...]
 Show properties of one or more units, jobs, or the manager
 itself. If no argument is specified, properties of the manager
 will be shown. If a unit name is specified, properties of the
 unit are shown, and if a job ID is specified, properties of
 the job are shown. By default, empty properties are
 suppressed. Use --all to show those too. To select specific
 properties to show, use --property=. This command is intended
 to be used whenever computer-parsable output is required. Use
 status if you are looking for formatted human-readable output.
 Many properties shown by systemctl show map directly to
 configuration settings of the system and service manager and
 its unit files. Note that the properties shown by the command
 are generally more low-level, normalized versions of the
 original configuration settings and expose runtime state in
 addition to configuration. For example, properties shown for
 service units include the service's current main process
 identifier as "MainPID" (which is runtime state), and time
 settings are always exposed as properties ending in the
 "...USec" suffix even if a matching configuration options end
 in "...Sec", because microseconds is the normalized time unit
 used internally by the system and service manager.
 For details about many of these properties, see the
 documentation of the D-Bus interface backing these properties,
 see org.freedesktop.systemd1(5).
 cat PATTERN...
 Show backing files of one or more units. Prints the "fragment"
 and "drop-ins" (source files) of units. Each file is preceded
 by a comment which includes the file name. Note that this
 shows the contents of the backing files on disk, which might
 not match the system manager's understanding of these units if
 any unit files were updated on disk and the daemon-reload
 command was not issued since.
 Added in version 209.
 help PATTERN...|PID...
 Show manual pages for one or more units, if available. If a
 PID is given, the manual pages for the unit the process
 belongs to are shown.
 Added in version 185.
 list-dependencies [UNIT...]
 Shows units required and wanted by the specified units. This
 recursively lists units following the Requires=, Requisite=,
 Wants=, ConsistsOf=, BindsTo=, and Upholds= dependencies. If
 no units are specified, default.target is implied.
 The units that are shown are additionally filtered by --type=
 and --state= if those options are specified. Note that we will
 not be able to use a tree structure in this case, so --plain
 is implied.
 By default, only target units are recursively expanded. When
 --all is passed, all other units are recursively expanded as
 well.
 Options --reverse, --after, --before may be used to change
 what types of dependencies are shown.
 Note that this command only lists units currently loaded into
 memory by the service manager. In particular, this command is
 not suitable to get a comprehensive list at all reverse
 dependencies on a specific unit, as it will not list the
 dependencies declared by units currently not loaded.
 Added in version 198.
 start PATTERN...
 Start (activate) one or more units specified on the command
 line.
 Note that unit glob patterns expand to names of units
 currently in memory. Units which are not active and are not in
 a failed state usually are not in memory, and will not be
 matched by any pattern. In addition, in case of instantiated
 units, systemd is often unaware of the instance name until the
 instance has been started. Therefore, using glob patterns with
 start has limited usefulness. Also, secondary alias names of
 units are not considered.
 Option --all may be used to also operate on inactive units
 which are referenced by other loaded units. Note that this is
 not the same as operating on "all" possible units, because as
 the previous paragraph describes, such a list is ill-defined.
 Nevertheless, systemctl start --all GLOB may be useful if all
 the units that should match the pattern are pulled in by some
 target which is known to be loaded.
 stop PATTERN...
 Stop (deactivate) one or more units specified on the command
 line.
 This command will fail if the unit does not exist or if
 stopping of the unit is prohibited (see RefuseManualStop= in
 systemd.unit(5)). It will not fail if any of the commands
 configured to stop the unit (ExecStop=, etc.) fail, because
 the manager will still forcibly terminate the unit.
 If a unit that gets stopped can still be triggered by other
 units, a warning containing the names of the triggering units
 is shown. --no-warn can be used to suppress the warning.
 reload PATTERN...
 Asks all units listed on the command line to reload their
 configuration. Note that this will reload the service-specific
 configuration, not the unit configuration file of systemd. If
 you want systemd to reload the configuration file of a unit,
 use the daemon-reload command. In other words: for the example
 case of Apache, this will reload Apache's httpd.conf in the
 web server, not the apache.service systemd unit file.
 This command should not be confused with the daemon-reload
 command.
 restart PATTERN...
 Stop and then start one or more units specified on the command
 line. If the units are not running yet, they will be started.
 Note that restarting a unit with this command does not
 necessarily flush out all of the unit's resources before it is
 started again. For example, the per-service file descriptor
 storage facility (see FileDescriptorStoreMax= in
 systemd.service(5)) will remain intact as long as the unit has
 a job pending, and is only cleared when the unit is fully
 stopped and no jobs are pending anymore. If it is intended
 that the file descriptor store is flushed out, too, during a
 restart operation an explicit systemctl stop command followed
 by systemctl start should be issued.
 try-restart PATTERN...
 Stop and then start one or more units specified on the command
 line if the units are running. This does nothing if units are
 not running.
 reload-or-restart PATTERN...
 Reload one or more units if they support it. If not, stop and
 then start them instead. If the units are not running yet,
 they will be started.
 This has a slightly differing functionality when used in
 combination with --marked, see below.
 try-reload-or-restart PATTERN...
 Reload one or more units if they support it. If not, stop and
 then start them instead. This does nothing if the units are
 not running.
 Added in version 229.
 isolate UNIT
 Start the unit specified on the command line and its
 dependencies and stop all others, unless they have
 IgnoreOnIsolate=yes (see systemd.unit(5)). If a unit name with
 no extension is given, an extension of ".target" will be
 assumed.
 This command is dangerous, since it will immediately stop
 processes that are not enabled in the new target, possibly
 including the graphical environment or terminal you are
 currently using.
 Note that this operation is allowed only on units where
 AllowIsolate= is enabled. See systemd.unit(5) for details.
 kill PATTERN...
 Send a UNIX process signal to one or more processes of the
 unit. Use --kill-whom= to select which process to send the
 signal to. Use --signal= to select the signal to send. Combine
 with --kill-value= to enqueue a POSIX Realtime Signal with an
 associated value.
 clean PATTERN...
 Remove the configuration, state, cache, logs, runtime or file
 descriptor store data of the specified units. Use --what= to
 select which kind of resource to remove. For service units
 this may be used to remove the directories configured with
 ConfigurationDirectory=, StateDirectory=, CacheDirectory=,
 LogsDirectory= and RuntimeDirectory=, see systemd.exec(5) for
 details. It may also be used to clear the file descriptor
 store as enabled via FileDescriptorStoreMax=, see
 systemd.service(5) for details. For timer units this may be
 used to clear out the persistent timestamp data if Persistent=
 is used and --what=state is selected, see systemd.timer(5).
 This command only applies to units that use either of these
 settings. If --what= is not specified, the cache and runtime
 data as well as the file descriptor store are removed (as
 these three types of resources are generally redundant and
 reproducible on the next invocation of the unit). Multiple
 values can be separated by commas. Note that the specified
 units must be stopped to invoke this operation.
 Table 2. Possible values for --what=
 ┌─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
 │ Value Unit Setting │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "runtime" │ RuntimeDirectory= │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "state" │ StateDirectory= │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "cache" │ CacheDirectory= │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "logs" │ LogsDirectory= │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "configuration" │ ConfigurationDirectory= │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "fdstore" │ FileDescriptorStorePreserve= │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "all" │ All of the above │
 ├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
 │ "help" │ Show the supported values │
 │ │ and exit │
 └─────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘
 Added in version 243.
 freeze PATTERN...
 Freeze one or more units specified on the command line using
 cgroup freezer
 Freezing the unit will cause all processes contained within
 the cgroup corresponding to the unit to be suspended. Being
 suspended means that unit's processes will not be scheduled to
 run on CPU until thawed. Note that this command is supported
 only on systems that use unified cgroup hierarchy. Unit is
 automatically thawed just before we execute a job against the
 unit, e.g. before the unit is stopped.
 Added in version 246.
 thaw PATTERN...
 Thaw (unfreeze) one or more units specified on the command
 line.
 This is the inverse operation to the freeze command and
 resumes the execution of processes in the unit's cgroup.
 Added in version 246.
 set-property UNIT PROPERTY=VALUE...
 Set the specified unit properties at runtime where this is
 supported. This allows changing configuration parameter
 properties such as resource control settings at runtime. Not
 all properties may be changed at runtime, but many resource
 control settings (primarily those in
 systemd.resource-control(5)) may. The changes are applied
 immediately, and stored on disk for future boots, unless
 --runtime is passed, in which case the settings only apply
 until the next reboot. The syntax of the property assignment
 follows closely the syntax of assignments in unit files.
 Example: systemctl set-property foobar.service CPUWeight=200
 If the specified unit appears to be inactive, the changes will
 be only stored on disk as described previously hence they will
 be effective when the unit will be started.
 Note that this command allows changing multiple properties at
 the same time, which is preferable over setting them
 individually.
 Example: systemctl set-property foobar.service CPUWeight=200
 MemoryMax=2G IPAccounting=yes
 Like with unit file configuration settings, assigning an empty
 setting usually resets a property to its defaults.
 Example: systemctl set-property avahi-daemon.service
 IPAddressDeny=
 Added in version 206.
 bind UNIT PATH [PATH]
 Bind-mounts a file or directory from the host into the
 specified unit's mount namespace. The first path argument is
 the source file or directory on the host, the second path
 argument is the destination file or directory in the unit's
 mount namespace. When the latter is omitted, the destination
 path in the unit's mount namespace is the same as the source
 path on the host. When combined with the --read-only switch, a
 read-only bind mount is created. When combined with the
 --mkdir switch, the destination path is first created before
 the mount is applied.
 Note that this option is currently only supported for units
 that run within a mount namespace (e.g.: with RootImage=,
 PrivateMounts=, etc.). This command supports bind-mounting
 directories, regular files, device nodes, AF_UNIX socket
 nodes, as well as FIFOs. The bind mount is ephemeral, and it
 is undone as soon as the current unit process exists. Note
 that the namespace mentioned here, where the bind mount will
 be added to, is the one where the main service process runs.
 Other processes (those exececuted by ExecReload=,
 ExecStartPre=, etc.) run in distinct namespaces.
 If supported by the kernel, any prior mount on the selected
 target will be replaced by the new mount. If not supported,
 any prior mount will be over-mounted, but remain pinned and
 inaccessible.
 Added in version 248.
 mount-image UNIT IMAGE [PATH [PARTITION_NAME:MOUNT_OPTIONS]]
 Mounts an image from the host into the specified unit's mount
 namespace. The first path argument is the source image on the
 host, the second path argument is the destination directory in
 the unit's mount namespace (i.e. inside
 RootImage=/RootDirectory=). The following argument, if any, is
 interpreted as a colon-separated tuple of partition name and
 comma-separated list of mount options for that partition. The
 format is the same as the service MountImages= setting. When
 combined with the --read-only switch, a ready-only mount is
 created. When combined with the --mkdir switch, the
 destination path is first created before the mount is applied.
 Note that this option is currently only supported for units
 that run within a mount namespace (i.e. with RootImage=,
 PrivateMounts=, etc.). Note that the namespace mentioned here
 where the image mount will be added to, is the one where the
 main service process runs. Note that the namespace mentioned
 here, where the bind mount will be added to, is the one where
 the main service process runs. Other processes (those
 exececuted by ExecReload=, ExecStartPre=, etc.) run in
 distinct namespaces.
 If supported by the kernel, any prior mount on the selected
 target will be replaced by the new mount. If not supported,
 any prior mount will be over-mounted, but remain pinned and
 inaccessible.
 Example:
 systemctl mount-image foo.service /tmp/img.raw /var/lib/image root:ro,nosuid
 systemctl mount-image --mkdir bar.service /tmp/img.raw /var/lib/baz/img
 Added in version 248.
 service-log-level SERVICE [LEVEL]
 If the LEVEL argument is not given, print the current log
 level as reported by service SERVICE.
 If the optional argument LEVEL is provided, then change the
 current log level of the service to LEVEL. The log level
 should be a typical syslog log level, i.e. a value in the
 range 0...7 or one of the strings emerg, alert, crit, err,
 warning, notice, info, debug; see syslog(3) for details.
 The service must have the appropriate BusName=destination
 property and also implement the generic
 org.freedesktop.LogControl1(5) interface. (systemctl will use
 the generic D-Bus protocol to access the
 org.freedesktop.LogControl1.LogLevel interface for the D-Bus
 name destination.)
 Added in version 247.
 service-log-target SERVICE [TARGET]
 If the TARGET argument is not given, print the current log
 target as reported by service SERVICE.
 If the optional argument TARGET is provided, then change the
 current log target of the service to TARGET. The log target
 should be one of the strings console (for log output to the
 service's standard error stream), kmsg (for log output to the
 kernel log buffer), journal (for log output to
 systemd-journald.service(8) using the native journal
 protocol), syslog (for log output to the classic syslog socket
 /dev/log), null (for no log output whatsoever) or auto (for an
 automatically determined choice, typically equivalent to
 console if the service is invoked interactively, and journal
 or syslog otherwise).
 For most services, only a small subset of log targets make
 sense. In particular, most "normal" services should only
 implement console, journal, and null. Anything else is only
 appropriate for low-level services that are active in very
 early boot before proper logging is established.
 The service must have the appropriate BusName=destination
 property and also implement the generic
 org.freedesktop.LogControl1(5) interface. (systemctl will use
 the generic D-Bus protocol to access the
 org.freedesktop.LogControl1.LogLevel interface for the D-Bus
 name destination.)
 Added in version 247.
 reset-failed [PATTERN...]
 Reset the "failed" state of the specified units, or if no unit
 name is passed, reset the state of all units. When a unit
 fails in some way (i.e. process exiting with non-zero error
 code, terminating abnormally or timing out), it will
 automatically enter the "failed" state and its exit code and
 status is recorded for introspection by the administrator
 until the service is stopped/re-started or reset with this
 command.
 In addition to resetting the "failed" state of a unit it also
 resets various other per-unit properties: the start rate limit
 counter of all unit types is reset to zero, as is the restart
 counter of service units. Thus, if a unit's start limit (as
 configured with StartLimitIntervalSec=/StartLimitBurst=) is
 hit and the unit refuses to be started again, use this command
 to make it startable again.
 whoami [PID...]
 Returns the units the processes referenced by the given PIDs
 belong to (one per line). If no PID is specified returns the
 unit the systemctl command is invoked in.
 Added in version 254.
 Unit File Commands
 list-unit-files [PATTERN...]
 List unit files installed on the system, in combination with
 their enablement state (as reported by is-enabled). If one or
 more PATTERNs are specified, only unit files whose name
 matches one of them are shown (patterns matching unit file
 system paths are not supported).
 Unlike list-units this command will list template units in
 addition to explicitly instantiated units.
 Added in version 233.
 enable UNIT..., enable PATH...
 Enable one or more units or unit instances. This will create a
 set of symlinks, as encoded in the [Install] sections of the
 indicated unit files. After the symlinks have been created,
 the system manager configuration is reloaded (in a way
 equivalent to daemon-reload), in order to ensure the changes
 are taken into account immediately. Note that this does not
 have the effect of also starting any of the units being
 enabled. If this is desired, combine this command with the
 --now switch, or invoke start with appropriate arguments
 later. Note that in case of unit instance enablement (i.e.
 enablement of units of the form foo@bar.service), symlinks
 named the same as instances are created in the unit
 configuration directory, however they point to the single
 template unit file they are instantiated from.
 This command expects either valid unit names (in which case
 various unit file directories are automatically searched for
 unit files with appropriate names), or absolute paths to unit
 files (in which case these files are read directly). If a
 specified unit file is located outside of the usual unit file
 directories, an additional symlink is created, linking it into
 the unit configuration path, thus ensuring it is found when
 requested by commands such as start. The file system where the
 linked unit files are located must be accessible when systemd
 is started (e.g. anything underneath /home/ or /var/ is not
 allowed, unless those directories are located on the root file
 system).
 This command will print the file system operations executed.
 This output may be suppressed by passing --quiet.
 Note that this operation creates only the symlinks suggested
 in the [Install] section of the unit files. While this command
 is the recommended way to manipulate the unit configuration
 directory, the administrator is free to make additional
 changes manually by placing or removing symlinks below this
 directory. This is particularly useful to create
 configurations that deviate from the suggested default
 installation. In this case, the administrator must make sure
 to invoke daemon-reload manually as necessary, in order to
 ensure the changes are taken into account.
 When using this operation on units without install
 information, a warning about it is shown. --no-warn can be
 used to suppress the warning.
 Enabling units should not be confused with starting
 (activating) units, as done by the start command. Enabling and
 starting units is orthogonal: units may be enabled without
 being started and started without being enabled. Enabling
 simply hooks the unit into various suggested places (for
 example, so that the unit is automatically started on boot or
 when a particular kind of hardware is plugged in). Starting
 actually spawns the daemon process (in case of service units),
 or binds the socket (in case of socket units), and so on.
 Depending on whether --system, --user, --runtime, or --global
 is specified, this enables the unit for the system, for the
 calling user only, for only this boot of the system, or for
 all future logins of all users. Note that in the last case, no
 systemd daemon configuration is reloaded.
 Using enable on masked units is not supported and results in
 an error.
 disable UNIT...
 Disables one or more units. This removes all symlinks to the
 unit files backing the specified units from the unit
 configuration directory, and hence undoes any changes made by
 enable or link. Note that this removes all symlinks to
 matching unit files, including manually created symlinks, and
 not just those actually created by enable or link. Note that
 while disable undoes the effect of enable, the two commands
 are otherwise not symmetric, as disable may remove more
 symlinks than a prior enable invocation of the same unit
 created.
 This command expects valid unit names only, it does not accept
 paths to unit files.
 In addition to the units specified as arguments, all units are
 disabled that are listed in the Also= setting contained in the
 [Install] section of any of the unit files being operated on.
 This command implicitly reloads the system manager
 configuration after completing the operation. Note that this
 command does not implicitly stop the units that are being
 disabled. If this is desired, either combine this command with
 the --now switch, or invoke the stop command with appropriate
 arguments later.
 This command will print information about the file system
 operations (symlink removals) executed. This output may be
 suppressed by passing --quiet.
 If a unit gets disabled but its triggering units are still
 active, a warning containing the names of the triggering units
 is shown. --no-warn can be used to suppress the warning.
 When this command is used with --user, the units being
 operated on might still be enabled in global scope, and thus
 get started automatically even after a successful disablement
 in user scope. In this case, a warning about it is shown,
 which can be suppressed using --no-warn.
 This command honors --system, --user, --runtime, --global and
 --no-warn in a similar way as enable.
 Added in version 238.
 reenable UNIT...
 Reenable one or more units, as specified on the command line.
 This is a combination of disable and enable and is useful to
 reset the symlinks a unit file is enabled with to the defaults
 configured in its [Install] section. This command expects a
 unit name only, it does not accept paths to unit files.
 This command implicitly reloads the system manager
 configuration after completing the operation. Note that this
 command does not implicitly restart the units that are being
 disabled. If this is desired, either combine this command with
 the --now switch, or invoke the try-restart command with
 appropriate arguments later.
 Added in version 238.
 preset UNIT...
 Reset the enable/disable status of one or more unit files, as
 specified on the command line, to the defaults configured in
 the preset policy files. This has the same effect as disable
 or enable, depending how the unit is listed in the preset
 files.
 Use --preset-mode= to control whether units shall be enabled
 and disabled, or only enabled, or only disabled.
 If the unit carries no install information, it will be
 silently ignored by this command. UNIT must be the real unit
 name, any alias names are ignored silently.
 For more information on the preset policy format, see
 systemd.preset(5).
 Added in version 238.
 preset-all
 Resets all installed unit files to the defaults configured in
 the preset policy file (see above).
 Use --preset-mode= to control whether units shall be enabled
 and disabled, or only enabled, or only disabled.
 Added in version 215.
 is-enabled UNIT...
 Checks whether any of the specified unit files are enabled (as
 with enable). Returns an exit code of 0 if at least one is
 enabled, non-zero otherwise. Prints the current enable status
 (see table). To suppress this output, use --quiet. To show
 installation targets, use --full.
 Table 3. is-enabled output
 ┌───────────────────┬─────────────────────────┬───────────┐
 │ Name Description Exit Code │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "enabled" │ Enabled via │ │
 ├───────────────────┤ .wants/, │ │
 │ "enabled-runtime" │ .requires/ or │ │
 │ │ Alias= symlinks │ 0 │
 │ │ (permanently in │ │
 │ │ /etc/systemd/system/, │ │
 │ │ or transiently in │ │
 │ │ /run/systemd/system/). │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "linked" │ Made available through │ │
 ├───────────────────┤ one or more symlinks │ │
 │ "linked-runtime" │ to the unit file │ │
 │ │ (permanently in │ │
 │ │ /etc/systemd/system/ │ │
 │ │ or transiently in │ > 0 │
 │ │ /run/systemd/system/), │ │
 │ │ even though the unit │ │
 │ │ file might reside │ │
 │ │ outside of the unit │ │
 │ │ file search path. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "alias" │ The name is an alias │ 0 │
 │ │ (symlink to another │ │
 │ │ unit file). │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "masked" │ Completely disabled, │ │
 ├───────────────────┤ so that any start │ │
 │ "masked-runtime" │ operation on it fails │ │
 │ │ (permanently in │ > 0 │
 │ │ /etc/systemd/system/ │ │
 │ │ or transiently in │ │
 │ │ /run/systemd/systemd/). │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "static" │ The unit file is not │ 0 │
 │ │ enabled, and has no │ │
 │ │ provisions for enabling │ │
 │ │ in the [Install] unit │ │
 │ │ file section. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "indirect" │ The unit file itself is │ 0 │
 │ │ not enabled, but it has │ │
 │ │ a non-empty Also= │ │
 │ │ setting in the │ │
 │ │ [Install] unit file │ │
 │ │ section, listing other │ │
 │ │ unit files that might │ │
 │ │ be enabled, or it has │ │
 │ │ an alias under a │ │
 │ │ different name through │ │
 │ │ a symlink that is not │ │
 │ │ specified in Also=. For │ │
 │ │ template unit files, an │ │
 │ │ instance different than │ │
 │ │ the one specified in │ │
 │ │ DefaultInstance= is │ │
 │ │ enabled. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "disabled" │ The unit file is not │ > 0 │
 │ │ enabled, but contains │ │
 │ │ an [Install] section │ │
 │ │ with installation │ │
 │ │ instructions. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "generated" │ The unit file was │ 0 │
 │ │ generated dynamically │ │
 │ │ via a generator tool. │ │
 │ │ See │ │
 │ │ systemd.generator(7). │ │
 │ │ Generated unit files │ │
 │ │ may not be enabled, │ │
 │ │ they are enabled │ │
 │ │ implicitly by their │ │
 │ │ generator. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "transient" │ The unit file has been │ 0 │
 │ │ created dynamically │ │
 │ │ with the runtime API. │ │
 │ │ Transient units may not │ │
 │ │ be enabled. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "bad" │ The unit file is │ > 0 │
 │ │ invalid or another │ │
 │ │ error occurred. Note │ │
 │ │ that is-enabled will │ │
 │ │ not actually return │ │
 │ │ this state, but print │ │
 │ │ an error message │ │
 │ │ instead. However, the │ │
 │ │ unit file listing │ │
 │ │ printed by │ │
 │ │ list-unit-files might │ │
 │ │ show it. │ │
 ├───────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ "not-found" │ The unit file does not │ 4 │
 │ │ exist. │ │
 └───────────────────┴─────────────────────────┴───────────┘
 Added in version 238.
 mask UNIT...
 Mask one or more units, as specified on the command line. This
 will link these unit files to /dev/null, making it impossible
 to start them. This is a stronger version of disable, since it
 prohibits all kinds of activation of the unit, including
 enablement and manual activation. Use this option with care.
 This honors the --runtime option to only mask temporarily
 until the next reboot of the system. The --now option may be
 used to ensure that the units are also stopped. This command
 expects valid unit names only, it does not accept unit file
 paths.
 Note that this will create a symlink under the unit's name in
 /etc/systemd/system/ (in case --runtime is not specified) or
 /run/systemd/system/ (in case --runtime is specified). If a
 matching unit file already exists under these directories this
 operation will hence fail. This means that the operation is
 primarily useful to mask units shipped by the vendor (as those
 are shipped in /usr/lib/systemd/system/ and not the
 aforementioned two directories), but typically does not work
 for units created locally (as those are typically placed
 precisely in the two aforementioned directories). Similar
 restrictions apply for --user mode, in which case the
 directories are below the user's home directory however.
 If a unit gets masked but its triggering units are still
 active, a warning containing the names of the triggering units
 is shown. --no-warn can be used to suppress the warning.
 Added in version 238.
 unmask UNIT...
 Unmask one or more unit files, as specified on the command
 line. This will undo the effect of mask. This command expects
 valid unit names only, it does not accept unit file paths.
 Added in version 238.
 link PATH...
 Link a unit file that is not in the unit file search path into
 the unit file search path. This command expects an absolute
 path to a unit file. The effect of this may be undone with
 disable. The effect of this command is that a unit file is
 made available for commands such as start, even though it is
 not installed directly in the unit search path. The file
 system where the linked unit files are located must be
 accessible when systemd is started (e.g. anything underneath
 /home/ or /var/ is not allowed, unless those directories are
 located on the root file system).
 Added in version 233.
 revert UNIT...
 Revert one or more unit files to their vendor versions. This
 command removes drop-in configuration files that modify the
 specified units, as well as any user-configured unit file that
 overrides a matching vendor supplied unit file. Specifically,
 for a unit "foo.service" the matching directories
 "foo.service.d/" with all their contained files are removed,
 both below the persistent and runtime configuration
 directories (i.e. below /etc/systemd/system and
 /run/systemd/system); if the unit file has a vendor-supplied
 version (i.e. a unit file located below /usr/) any matching
 persistent or runtime unit file that overrides it is removed,
 too. Note that if a unit file has no vendor-supplied version
 (i.e. is only defined below /etc/systemd/system or
 /run/systemd/system, but not in a unit file stored below
 /usr/), then it is not removed. Also, if a unit is masked, it
 is unmasked.
 Effectively, this command may be used to undo all changes made
 with systemctl edit, systemctl set-property and systemctl mask
 and puts the original unit file with its settings back in
 effect.
 Added in version 230.
 add-wants TARGET UNIT..., add-requires TARGET UNIT...
 Adds "Wants=" or "Requires=" dependencies, respectively, to
 the specified TARGET for one or more units.
 This command honors --system, --user, --runtime and --global
 in a way similar to enable.
 Added in version 217.
 edit UNIT...
 Edit or replace a drop-in snippet or the main unit file, to
 extend or override the definition of the specified unit.
 Depending on whether --system (the default), --user, or
 --global is specified, this command will operate on the system
 unit files, unit files for the calling user, or the unit files
 shared between all users.
 The editor (see the "Environment" section below) is invoked on
 temporary files which will be written to the real location if
 the editor exits successfully. After the editing is finished,
 configuration is reloaded, equivalent to systemctl
 daemon-reload --system or systemctl daemon-reload --user. For
 edit --global, the reload is not performed and the edits will
 take effect only for subsequent logins (or after a reload is
 requested in a different way).
 If --full is specified, a replacement for the main unit file
 will be created or edited. Otherwise, a drop-in file will be
 created or edited.
 If --drop-in= is specified, the given drop-in file name will
 be used instead of the default override.conf.
 The unit must exist, i.e. its main unit file must be present.
 If --force is specified, this requirement is ignored and a new
 unit may be created (with --full), or a drop-in for a
 nonexistent unit may be created.
 If --runtime is specified, the changes will be made
 temporarily in /run/ and they will be lost on the next reboot.
 If --stdin is specified, the new contents will be read from
 standard input. In this mode, the old contents of the file are
 discarded.
 If the temporary file is empty upon exit, the modification of
 the related unit is canceled.
 Note that this command cannot be used to remotely edit units
 and that you cannot temporarily edit units which are in /etc/,
 since they take precedence over /run/.
 Added in version 218.
 get-default
 Return the default target to boot into. This returns the
 target unit name default.target is aliased (symlinked) to.
 Added in version 205.
 set-default TARGET
 Set the default target to boot into. This sets (symlinks) the
 default.target alias to the given target unit.
 Added in version 205.
 Machine Commands
 list-machines [PATTERN...]
 List the host and all running local containers with their
 state. If one or more PATTERNs are specified, only containers
 matching one of them are shown.
 Added in version 212.
 Job Commands
 list-jobs [PATTERN...]
 List jobs that are in progress. If one or more PATTERNs are
 specified, only jobs for units matching one of them are shown.
 When combined with --after or --before the list is augmented
 with information on which other job each job is waiting for,
 and which other jobs are waiting for it, see above.
 Added in version 233.
 cancel [JOB...]
 Cancel one or more jobs specified on the command line by their
 numeric job IDs. If no job ID is specified, cancel all pending
 jobs.
 Added in version 233.
 Environment Commands
 systemd supports an environment block that is passed to processes
 the manager spawns. The names of the variables can contain ASCII
 letters, digits, and the underscore character. Variable names
 cannot be empty or start with a digit. In variable values, most
 characters are allowed, but the whole sequence must be valid
 UTF-8. (Note that control characters like newline (NL), tab (TAB),
 or the escape character (ESC), are valid ASCII and thus valid
 UTF-8). The total length of the environment block is limited to
 _SC_ARG_MAX value defined by sysconf(3).
 show-environment
 Dump the systemd manager environment block. This is the
 environment block that is passed to all processes the manager
 spawns. The environment block will be dumped in
 straightforward form suitable for sourcing into most shells.
 If no special characters or whitespace is present in the
 variable values, no escaping is performed, and the assignments
 have the form "VARIABLE=value". If whitespace or characters
 which have special meaning to the shell are present,
 dollar-single-quote escaping is used, and assignments have the
 form "VARIABLE=$'value'". This syntax is known to be supported
 by bash(1), zsh(1), ksh(1), and busybox(1)'s ash(1), but not
 dash(1) or fish(1).
 Note that this shows the effective block, i.e. the combination
 of environment variables configured via configuration files,
 environment generators and via IPC (i.e. via the
 set-environment described below). At the moment a unit process
 is forked off, this combined environment block will be further
 combined with per-unit environment variables, which are not
 visible in this command.
 set-environment VARIABLE=VALUE...
 Set one or more service manager environment variables, as
 specified on the command line. This command will fail if
 variable names and values do not conform to the rules listed
 above.
 Note that this operates on an environment block separate from
 the environment block configured from service manager
 configuration and environment generators. Whenever a process
 is invoked the two blocks are combined (also incorporating any
 per-service environment variables), and passed to it. The
 show-environment verb will show the combination of the blocks,
 see above.
 Added in version 233.
 unset-environment VARIABLE...
 Unset one or more systemd manager environment variables. If
 only a variable name is specified, it will be removed
 regardless of its value. If a variable and a value are
 specified, the variable is only removed if it has the
 specified value.
 Note that this operates on an environment block separate from
 the environment block configured from service manager
 configuration and environment generators. Whenever a process
 is invoked the two blocks are combined (also incorporating any
 per-service environment variables), and passed to it. The
 show-environment verb will show the combination of the blocks,
 see above. Note that this means this command cannot be used to
 unset environment variables defined in the service manager
 configuration files or via generators.
 Added in version 233.
 import-environment VARIABLE...
 Import all, one or more environment variables set on the
 client into the systemd manager environment block. If a list
 of environment variable names is passed, client-side values
 are then imported into the manager's environment block. If any
 names are not valid environment variable names or have invalid
 values according to the rules described above, an error is
 raised. If no arguments are passed, the entire environment
 block inherited by the systemctl process is imported. In this
 mode, any inherited invalid environment variables are quietly
 ignored.
 Importing of the full inherited environment block (calling
 this command without any arguments) is deprecated. A shell
 will set dozens of variables which only make sense locally and
 are only meant for processes which are descendants of the
 shell. Such variables in the global environment block are
 confusing to other processes.
 Added in version 209.
 Manager State Commands
 daemon-reload
 Reload the systemd manager configuration. This will rerun all
 generators (see systemd.generator(7)), reload all unit files,
 and recreate the entire dependency tree. While the daemon is
 being reloaded, all sockets systemd listens on behalf of user
 configuration will stay accessible.
 This command should not be confused with the reload command.
 daemon-reexec
 Reexecute the systemd manager. This will serialize the manager
 state, reexecute the process and deserialize the state again.
 This command is of little use except for debugging and package
 upgrades. Sometimes, it might be helpful as a heavy-weight
 daemon-reload. While the daemon is being reexecuted, all
 sockets systemd listening on behalf of user configuration will
 stay accessible.
 log-level [LEVEL]
 If no argument is given, print the current log level of the
 manager. If an optional argument LEVEL is provided, then the
 command changes the current log level of the manager to LEVEL
 (accepts the same values as --log-level= described in
 systemd(1)).
 Added in version 244.
 log-target [TARGET]
 If no argument is given, print the current log target of the
 manager. If an optional argument TARGET is provided, then the
 command changes the current log target of the manager to
 TARGET (accepts the same values as --log-target=, described in
 systemd(1)).
 Added in version 244.
 service-watchdogs [yes|no]
 If no argument is given, print the current state of service
 runtime watchdogs of the manager. If an optional boolean
 argument is provided, then globally enables or disables the
 service runtime watchdogs (WatchdogSec=) and emergency actions
 (e.g. OnFailure= or StartLimitAction=); see
 systemd.service(5). The hardware watchdog is not affected by
 this setting.
 Added in version 244.
 System Commands
 is-system-running
 Checks whether the system is operational. This returns success
 (exit code 0) when the system is fully up and running,
 specifically not in startup, shutdown or maintenance mode, and
 with no failed services. Failure is returned otherwise (exit
 code non-zero). In addition, the current state is printed in a
 short string to standard output, see the table below. Use
 --quiet to suppress this output.
 Use --wait to wait until the boot process is completed before
 printing the current state and returning the appropriate error
 status. If --wait is in use, states initializing or starting
 will not be reported, instead the command will block until a
 later state (such as running or degraded) is reached.
 Table 4. is-system-running output
 ┌──────────────┬────────────────────┬───────────┐
 │ Name Description Exit Code │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ initializing │ Early bootup, │ > 0 │
 │ │ before │ │
 │ │ basic.target is │ │
 │ │ reached or the │ │
 │ │ maintenance state │ │
 │ │ entered. │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ starting │ Late bootup, │ > 0 │
 │ │ before the job │ │
 │ │ queue becomes idle │ │
 │ │ for the first │ │
 │ │ time, or one of │ │
 │ │ the rescue targets │ │
 │ │ are reached. │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ running │ The system is │ 0 │
 │ │ fully operational. │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ degraded │ The system is │ > 0 │
 │ │ operational but │ │
 │ │ one or more units │ │
 │ │ failed. │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ maintenance │ The rescue or │ > 0 │
 │ │ emergency target │ │
 │ │ is active. │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ stopping │ The manager is │ > 0 │
 │ │ shutting down. │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ offline │ The manager is not │ > 0 │
 │ │ running. │ │
 │ │ Specifically, this │ │
 │ │ is the operational │ │
 │ │ state if an │ │
 │ │ incompatible │ │
 │ │ program is running │ │
 │ │ as system manager │ │
 │ │ (PID 1). │ │
 ├──────────────┼────────────────────┼───────────┤
 │ unknown │ The operational │ > 0 │
 │ │ state could not be │ │
 │ │ determined, due to │ │
 │ │ lack of resources │ │
 │ │ or another error │ │
 │ │ cause. │ │
 └──────────────┴────────────────────┴───────────┘
 Added in version 215.
 default
 Enter default mode. This is equivalent to systemctl isolate
 default.target. This operation is blocking by default, use
 --no-block to request asynchronous behavior.
 rescue
 Enter rescue mode. This is equivalent to systemctl isolate
 rescue.target. This operation is blocking by default, use
 --no-block to request asynchronous behavior.
 emergency
 Enter emergency mode. This is equivalent to systemctl isolate
 emergency.target. This operation is blocking by default, use
 --no-block to request asynchronous behavior.
 halt
 Shut down and halt the system. This is mostly equivalent to
 systemctl start halt.target --job-mode=replace-irreversibly
 --no-block, but also prints a wall message to all users. This
 command is asynchronous; it will return after the halt
 operation is enqueued, without waiting for it to complete.
 Note that this operation will simply halt the OS kernel after
 shutting down, leaving the hardware powered on. Use systemctl
 poweroff for powering off the system (see below).
 If combined with --force, shutdown of all running services is
 skipped, however all processes are killed and all file systems
 are unmounted or mounted read-only, immediately followed by
 the system halt. If --force is specified twice, the operation
 is immediately executed without terminating any processes or
 unmounting any file systems. This may result in data loss.
 Note that when --force is specified twice the halt operation
 is executed by systemctl itself, and the system manager is not
 contacted. This means the command should succeed even when the
 system manager has crashed.
 If combined with --when=, shutdown will be scheduled after the
 given timestamp. And --when=cancel will cancel the shutdown.
 poweroff
 Shut down and power-off the system. This is mostly equivalent
 to systemctl start poweroff.target
 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly --no-block, but also prints a
 wall message to all users. This command is asynchronous; it
 will return after the power-off operation is enqueued, without
 waiting for it to complete.
 This command honors --force and --when= in a similar way as
 halt.
 reboot
 Shut down and reboot the system.
 This command mostly equivalent to systemctl start
 reboot.target --job-mode=replace-irreversibly --no-block, but
 also prints a wall message to all users. This command is
 asynchronous; it will return after the reboot operation is
 enqueued, without waiting for it to complete.
 If the switch --reboot-argument= is given, it will be passed
 as the optional argument to the reboot(2) system call.
 Options --boot-loader-entry=, --boot-loader-menu=, and
 --firmware-setup can be used to select what to do after the
 reboot. See the descriptions of those options for details.
 This command honors --force and --when= in a similar way as
 halt.
 If a new kernel has been loaded via kexec --load, a kexec will
 be performed instead of a reboot, unless
 "SYSTEMCTL_SKIP_AUTO_KEXEC=1" has been set. If a new root file
 system has been set up on "/run/nextroot/", a soft-reboot will
 be performed instead of a reboot, unless
 "SYSTEMCTL_SKIP_AUTO_SOFT_REBOOT=1" has been set.
 Added in version 246.
 kexec
 Shut down and reboot the system via kexec. This command will
 load a kexec kernel if one was not loaded yet or fail. A
 kernel may be loaded earlier by a separate step, this is
 particularly useful if a custom initrd or additional kernel
 command line options are desired. The --force can be used to
 continue without a kexec kernel, i.e. to perform a normal
 reboot. The final reboot step is equivalent to systemctl start
 kexec.target --job-mode=replace-irreversibly --no-block.
 To load a kernel, an enumeration is performed following the
 Boot Loader Specification[1], and the default boot entry is
 loaded. For this step to succeed, the system must be using
 UEFI and the boot loader entries must be configured
 appropriately. bootctl list may be used to list boot entries,
 see bootctl(1).
 This command is asynchronous; it will return after the reboot
 operation is enqueued, without waiting for it to complete.
 This command honors --force and --when= similarly to halt.
 If a new kernel has been loaded via kexec --load, a kexec will
 be performed when reboot is invoked, unless
 "SYSTEMCTL_SKIP_AUTO_KEXEC=1" has been set.
 soft-reboot
 Shut down and reboot userspace. This is equivalent to
 systemctl start soft-reboot.target
 --job-mode=replace-irreversibly --no-block. This command is
 asynchronous; it will return after the reboot operation is
 enqueued, without waiting for it to complete.
 This command honors --force and --when= in a similar way as
 halt.
 This operation only reboots userspace, leaving the kernel
 running. See systemd-soft-reboot.service(8) for details.
 If a new root file system has been set up on "/run/nextroot/",
 a soft-reboot will be performed when reboot is invoked, unless
 "SYSTEMCTL_SKIP_AUTO_SOFT_REBOOT=1" has been set.
 Added in version 254.
 exit [EXIT_CODE]
 Ask the service manager to quit. This is only supported for
 user service managers (i.e. in conjunction with the --user
 option) or in containers and is equivalent to poweroff
 otherwise. This command is asynchronous; it will return after
 the exit operation is enqueued, without waiting for it to
 complete.
 The service manager will exit with the specified exit code, if
 EXIT_CODE is passed.
 Added in version 227.
 switch-root [ROOT [INIT]]
 Switches to a different root directory and executes a new
 system manager process below it. This is intended for use in
 the initrd, and will transition from the initrd's system
 manager process (a.k.a. "init" process, PID 1) to the main
 system manager process which is loaded from the actual host
 root files system. This call takes two arguments: the
 directory that is to become the new root directory, and the
 path to the new system manager binary below it to execute as
 PID 1. If both are omitted or the former is an empty string it
 defaults to /sysroot/. If the latter is omitted or is an empty
 string, a systemd binary will automatically be searched for
 and used as service manager. If the system manager path is
 omitted, equal to the empty string or identical to the path to
 the systemd binary, the state of the initrd's system manager
 process is passed to the main system manager, which allows
 later introspection of the state of the services involved in
 the initrd boot phase.
 Added in version 209.
 sleep
 Put the system to sleep, through suspend, hibernate,
 hybrid-sleep, or suspend-then-hibernate. The sleep operation
 to use is automatically selected by systemd-logind.service(8).
 By default, suspend-then-hibernate is used, and falls back to
 suspend and then hibernate if not supported. Refer to
 SleepOperation= setting in logind.conf(5) for more details.
 This command is asynchronous, and will return after the sleep
 operation is successfully enqueued. It will not wait for the
 sleep/resume cycle to complete.
 Added in version 256.
 suspend
 Suspend the system. This will trigger activation of the
 special target unit suspend.target. This command is
 asynchronous, and will return after the suspend operation is
 successfully enqueued. It will not wait for the suspend/resume
 cycle to complete.
 If --force is specified, and systemd-logind returned error for
 the operation, the error will be ignored and the operation
 will be tried again directly through starting the target unit.
 hibernate
 Hibernate the system. This will trigger activation of the
 special target unit hibernate.target. This command is
 asynchronous, and will return after the hibernation operation
 is successfully enqueued. It will not wait for the
 hibernate/thaw cycle to complete.
 This command honors --force in the same way as suspend.
 hybrid-sleep
 Hibernate and suspend the system. This will trigger activation
 of the special target unit hybrid-sleep.target. This command
 is asynchronous, and will return after the hybrid sleep
 operation is successfully enqueued. It will not wait for the
 sleep/wake-up cycle to complete.
 This command honors --force in the same way as suspend.
 Added in version 196.
 suspend-then-hibernate
 Suspend the system and hibernate it when the battery is low,
 or when the delay specified in systemd-sleep.conf elapsed.
 This will trigger activation of the special target unit
 suspend-then-hibernate.target. This command is asynchronous,
 and will return after the hybrid sleep operation is
 successfully enqueued. It will not wait for the sleep/wake-up
 or hibernate/thaw cycle to complete.
 This command honors --force in the same way as suspend.
 Added in version 240.
 Parameter Syntax
 Unit commands listed above take either a single unit name
 (designated as UNIT), or multiple unit specifications (designated
 as PATTERN...). In the first case, the unit name with or without a
 suffix must be given. If the suffix is not specified (unit name is
 "abbreviated"), systemctl will append a suitable suffix,
 ".service" by default, and a type-specific suffix in case of
 commands which operate only on specific unit types. For example,
 # systemctl start sshd
 and
 # systemctl start sshd.service
 are equivalent, as are
 # systemctl isolate default
 and
 # systemctl isolate default.target
 Note that (absolute) paths to device nodes are automatically
 converted to device unit names, and other (absolute) paths to
 mount unit names.
 # systemctl status /dev/sda
 # systemctl status /home
 are equivalent to:
 # systemctl status dev-sda.device
 # systemctl status home.mount
 In the second case, shell-style globs will be matched against the
 primary names of all units currently in memory; literal unit
 names, with or without a suffix, will be treated as in the first
 case. This means that literal unit names always refer to exactly
 one unit, but globs may match zero units and this is not
 considered an error.
 Glob patterns use fnmatch(3), so normal shell-style globbing rules
 are used, and "*", "?", "[]" may be used. See glob(7) for more
 details. The patterns are matched against the primary names of
 units currently in memory, and patterns which do not match
 anything are silently skipped. For example:
 # systemctl stop "sshd@*.service"
 will stop all sshd@.service instances. Note that alias names of
 units, and units that are not in memory are not considered for
 glob expansion.
 For unit file commands, the specified UNIT should be the name of
 the unit file (possibly abbreviated, see above), or the absolute
 path to the unit file:
 # systemctl enable foo.service
 or
 # systemctl link /path/to/foo.service

OPTIONS top

 The following options are understood:
 -t, --type=
 The argument is a comma-separated list of unit types such as
 service and socket. When units are listed with list-units,
 list-dependencies, show, or status, only units of the
 specified types will be shown. By default, units of all types
 are shown.
 As a special case, if one of the arguments is help, a list of
 allowed values will be printed and the program will exit.
 --state=
 The argument is a comma-separated list of unit LOAD, SUB, or
 ACTIVE states. When listing units with list-units,
 list-dependencies, show or status, show only those in the
 specified states. Use --state=failed or --failed to show only
 failed units.
 As a special case, if one of the arguments is help, a list of
 allowed values will be printed and the program will exit.
 Added in version 206.
 -p, --property=
 When showing unit/job/manager properties with the show
 command, limit display to properties specified in the
 argument. The argument should be a comma-separated list of
 property names, such as "MainPID". Unless specified, all known
 properties are shown. If specified more than once, all
 properties with the specified names are shown. Shell
 completion is implemented for property names.
 For the manager itself, systemctl show will show all available
 properties, most of which are derived or closely match the
 options described in systemd-system.conf(5).
 Properties for units vary by unit type, so showing any unit
 (even a non-existent one) is a way to list properties
 pertaining to this type. Similarly, showing any job will list
 properties pertaining to all jobs. Properties for units are
 documented in systemd.unit(5), and the pages for individual
 unit types systemd.service(5), systemd.socket(5), etc.
 -P
 Equivalent to --value --property=, i.e. shows the value of the
 property without the property name or "=". Note that using -P
 once will also affect all properties listed with
 -p/--property=.
 Added in version 246.
 -a, --all
 When listing units with list-units, also show inactive units
 and units which are following other units. When showing
 unit/job/manager properties, show all properties regardless
 whether they are set or not.
 To list all units installed in the file system, use the
 list-unit-files command instead.
 When listing units with list-dependencies, recursively show
 dependencies of all dependent units (by default only
 dependencies of target units are shown).
 When used with status, show journal messages in full, even if
 they include unprintable characters or are very long. By
 default, fields with unprintable characters are abbreviated as
 "blob data". (Note that the pager may escape unprintable
 characters again.)
 -r, --recursive
 When listing units, also show units of local containers. Units
 of local containers will be prefixed with the container name,
 separated by a single colon character (":").
 Added in version 212.
 --reverse
 Show reverse dependencies between units with
 list-dependencies, i.e. follow dependencies of type WantedBy=,
 RequiredBy=, UpheldBy=, PartOf=, BoundBy=, instead of Wants=
 and similar.
 Added in version 203.
 --after
 With list-dependencies, show the units that are ordered before
 the specified unit. In other words, recursively list units
 following the After= dependency.
 Note that any After= dependency is automatically mirrored to
 create a Before= dependency. Temporal dependencies may be
 specified explicitly, but are also created implicitly for
 units which are WantedBy= targets (see systemd.target(5)), and
 as a result of other directives (for example
 RequiresMountsFor=). Both explicitly and implicitly introduced
 dependencies are shown with list-dependencies.
 When passed to the list-jobs command, for each printed job
 show which other jobs are waiting for it. May be combined with
 --before to show both the jobs waiting for each job as well as
 all jobs each job is waiting for.
 Added in version 203.
 --before
 With list-dependencies, show the units that are ordered after
 the specified unit. In other words, recursively list units
 following the Before= dependency.
 When passed to the list-jobs command, for each printed job
 show which other jobs it is waiting for. May be combined with
 --after to show both the jobs waiting for each job as well as
 all jobs each job is waiting for.
 Added in version 212.
 --with-dependencies
 When used with status, cat, list-units, and list-unit-files,
 those commands print all specified units and the dependencies
 of those units.
 Options --reverse, --after, --before may be used to change
 what types of dependencies are shown.
 Added in version 245.
 -l, --full
 Do not ellipsize unit names, process tree entries, journal
 output, or truncate unit descriptions in the output of status,
 list-units, list-jobs, and list-timers.
 Also, show installation targets in the output of is-enabled.
 --value
 When printing properties with show, only print the value, and
 skip the property name and "=". Also see option -P above.
 Added in version 230.
 --show-types
 When showing sockets, show the type of the socket.
 Added in version 202.
 --job-mode=
 When queuing a new job, this option controls how to deal with
 already queued jobs. It takes one of "fail", "lenient",
 "replace", "replace-irreversibly", "isolate",
 "ignore-dependencies", "ignore-requirements", "flush",
 "triggering", or "restart-dependencies". Defaults to
 "replace", except when the isolate command is used which
 implies the "isolate" job mode.
 If "fail" is specified and a requested operation on weak
 dependencies conflicts with a pending job (more specifically:
 causes an already pending start job to be reversed into a stop
 job or vice versa), cause the operation to fail.
 If "lenient" is specified and a requested operation conflicts
 with any active/activating unit, cause the operation to fail.
 If "replace" (the default) is specified, any conflicting
 pending job will be replaced, as necessary.
 If "replace-irreversibly" is specified, operate like
 "replace", but also mark the new jobs as irreversible. This
 prevents future conflicting transactions from replacing these
 jobs (or even being enqueued while the irreversible jobs are
 still pending). Irreversible jobs can still be cancelled using
 the cancel command. This job mode should be used on any
 transaction which pulls in shutdown.target.
 "isolate" is only valid for start operations and causes all
 other units to be stopped when the specified unit is started.
 This mode is always used when the isolate command is used.
 "flush" will cause all queued jobs to be canceled when the new
 job is enqueued.
 If "ignore-dependencies" is specified, then all unit
 dependencies are ignored for this new job and the operation is
 executed immediately. If passed, no required units of the unit
 passed will be pulled in, and no ordering dependencies will be
 honored. This is mostly a debugging and rescue tool for the
 administrator and should not be used by applications.
 "ignore-requirements" is similar to "ignore-dependencies", but
 only causes the requirement dependencies to be ignored, the
 ordering dependencies will still be honored.
 "triggering" may only be used with systemctl stop. In this
 mode, the specified unit and any active units that trigger it
 are stopped. See the discussion of Triggers= in
 systemd.unit(5) for more information about triggering units.
 "restart-dependencies" may only be used with systemctl start.
 In this mode, dependencies of the specified unit will receive
 restart propagation, as if a restart job had been enqueued for
 the unit.
 Added in version 209.
 -T, --show-transaction
 When enqueuing a unit job (for example as effect of a
 systemctl start invocation or similar), show brief information
 about all jobs enqueued, covering both the requested job and
 any added because of unit dependencies. Note that the output
 will only include jobs immediately part of the transaction
 requested. It is possible that service start-up program code
 run as effect of the enqueued jobs might request further jobs
 to be pulled in. This means that completion of the listed jobs
 might ultimately entail more jobs than the listed ones.
 Added in version 242.
 --fail
 Shorthand for --job-mode=fail.
 When used with the kill command, if no units were killed, the
 operation results in an error.
 Added in version 227.
 --check-inhibitors=
 When system shutdown or sleep state is requested, this option
 controls checking of inhibitor locks. It takes one of "auto",
 "yes", and "no". Defaults to "auto", which means logind will
 perform the check and respect active inhibitor locks, but
 systemctl will only do a client-side check for interactive
 invocations (i.e. from a TTY), so that a more friendly and
 informative error can be returned to users. "no" disables the
 checks both in systemctl and systemd-logind(8).
 Applications can establish inhibitor locks to prevent certain
 important operations (such as CD burning) from being
 interrupted by system shutdown or sleep. Any user may take
 these locks and privileged users may override these locks. If
 any locks are taken, shutdown and sleep state requests will
 normally fail (unless explicitly overridden with "no").
 Option --force provides another way to override inhibitors.
 Added in version 248.
 -i
 Shortcut for --check-inhibitors=no.
 Added in version 198.
 --dry-run
 Just print what would be done. Currently supported by verbs
 halt, poweroff, reboot, kexec, suspend, hibernate,
 hybrid-sleep, suspend-then-hibernate, default, rescue,
 emergency, and exit.
 Added in version 236.
 -q, --quiet
 Suppress printing of the results of various commands and also
 the hints about truncated log lines. This does not suppress
 output of commands for which the printed output is the only
 result (like show). Errors are always printed.
 -v, --verbose
 Display unit log output while executing unit operations.
 Added in version 258.
 --no-warn
 Do not generate the warnings shown by default in the following
 cases:
 • when systemctl is invoked without procfs mounted on
 /proc/,
 • when using enable or disable on units without install
 information (i.e. do not have or have an empty [Install]
 section),
 • when using disable combined with --user on units that are
 enabled in global scope,
 • when a stop-ped, disable-d, or mask-ed unit still has
 active triggering units,
 • when a unit file is changed and requires daemon-reload.
 Added in version 253.
 --no-block
 Do not synchronously wait for the requested operation to
 finish. If this is not specified, the job will be verified,
 enqueued and systemctl will wait until the unit's start-up is
 completed. By passing this argument, it is only verified and
 enqueued. This option may not be combined with --wait.
 --wait
 When used with start or restart, synchronously wait for
 started units to terminate again. This option may not be
 combined with --no-block. Note that this will wait forever if
 any given unit never terminates (by itself or by getting
 stopped explicitly); particularly services which use
 "RemainAfterExit=yes".
 When used with is-system-running, wait until the boot process
 is completed before returning.
 When used with kill, wait until the signalled units terminate.
 Note that this will wait forever if any given unit never
 terminates.
 Added in version 232.
 --user
 Talk to the service manager of the calling user, rather than
 the service manager of the system.
 --system
 Talk to the service manager of the system. This is the implied
 default.
 --failed
 List units in failed state. This is equivalent to
 --state=failed.
 Added in version 233.
 --no-wall
 Do not send wall message before halt, power-off and reboot.
 --global
 When used with enable and disable, operate on the global user
 configuration directory, thus enabling or disabling a unit
 file globally for all future logins of all users.
 --no-reload
 When used with enable, disable, preset, mask, or unmask, do
 not implicitly reload daemon configuration after executing the
 changes.
 --kill-whom=
 When used with kill, choose which processes to send a UNIX
 process signal to. Must be one of main, control, cgroup or all
 to select whether to kill only the main process, the control
 process, all processes in the unit's control group or all
 processes of the unit. The main process of the unit is the one
 that defines the life-time of it. A control process of a unit
 is one that is invoked by the manager to induce state changes
 of it. For example, all processes started due to the
 ExecStartPre=, ExecStop= or ExecReload= settings of service
 units are control processes. Note that there is only one
 control process per unit at a time, as only one state change
 is executed at a time. For services of type Type=forking, the
 initial process started by the manager for ExecStart= is a
 control process, while the process ultimately forked off by
 that one is then considered the main process of the unit (if
 it can be determined). This is different for service units of
 other types, where the process forked off by the manager for
 ExecStart= is always the main process itself. A service unit
 consists of zero or one main process, zero or one control
 process plus any number of additional processes part of the
 unit's control group. Not all unit types manage processes of
 these types however. For example, for mount units, control
 processes are defined (which are the invocations of
 /usr/bin/mount and /usr/bin/umount), but no main process is
 defined. If omitted, defaults to all, except if
 --kill-subgroup= is used in which case defaults to cgroup.
 Added in version 252.
 --kill-value=INT
 If used with the kill command, enqueues a signal along with
 the specified integer value parameter to the specified
 process(es). This operation is only available for POSIX
 Realtime Signals (i.e. --signal=SIGRTMIN+... or
 --signal=SIGRTMAX-...), and ensures the signals are generated
 via the sigqueue(3) system call, rather than kill(3). The
 specified value must be a 32-bit signed integer, and may be
 specified either in decimal, in hexadecimal (if prefixed with
 "0x"), octal (if prefixed with "0o") or binary (if prefixed
 with "0b")
 If this option is used the signal will only be enqueued on the
 control or main process of the unit, never on other processes
 belonging to the unit, i.e. --kill-whom=all will only affect
 main and control processes but no other processes.
 Added in version 254.
 --kill-subgroup=PATH
 Takes a control group sub-path to send signals to, for use
 with the kill command. By default the chosen signal is
 delivered to all processes of the unit's cgroups (as well as
 the main/control processes (if outside) – subject to
 --kill-whom=). But with this option a subgroup can be
 selelected instead. This functionality is only available if
 "cgroup" or "cgroup-fail" are used with --kill-whom=, and in
 fact the former is the default if --kill-subgroup= is used.
 The specified path may, but doesn't have to be prefixed with a
 slash, and its absence or presence has no effect, the path is
 either way taken relative to the unit's main control group
 path.
 This functionality is only available on units where control
 group delegation is enabled (see Delegate= in
 systemd.resource-control(5)).
 Added in version 258.
 -s, --signal=
 When used with kill, choose which signal to send to selected
 processes. Must be one of the well-known signal specifiers
 such as SIGTERM, SIGINT or SIGSTOP. If omitted, defaults to
 SIGTERM.
 The special value "help" will list the known values and the
 program will exit immediately, and the special value "list"
 will list known values along with the numerical signal numbers
 and the program will exit immediately.
 --what=
 Select what type of per-unit resources to remove when the
 clean command is invoked, see above. Takes one of
 configuration, state, cache, logs, runtime, fdstore to select
 the type of resource. This option may be specified more than
 once, in which case all specified resource types are removed.
 Also accepts the special value all as a shortcut for
 specifying all six resource types. If this option is not
 specified defaults to the combination of cache, runtime and
 fdstore, i.e. the three kinds of resources that are generally
 considered to be redundant and can be reconstructed on next
 invocation. Note that the explicit removal of the fdstore
 resource type is only useful if the
 FileDescriptorStorePreserve= option is enabled, since the file
 descriptor store is otherwise cleaned automatically when the
 unit is stopped.
 Added in version 243.
 -f, --force
 When used with enable, overwrite any existing conflicting
 symlinks.
 When used with edit, create all of the specified units which
 do not already exist.
 When used with suspend, hibernate, hybrid-sleep, or
 suspend-then-hibernate, the error returned by systemd-logind
 will be ignored, and the operation will be performed directly
 through starting the corresponding units.
 When used with halt, poweroff, reboot, or kexec, execute the
 selected operation without shutting down all units. However,
 all processes will be killed forcibly and all file systems are
 unmounted or remounted read-only. This is hence a drastic but
 relatively safe option to request an immediate reboot. If
 --force is specified twice for these operations (with the
 exception of kexec), they will be executed immediately,
 without terminating any processes or unmounting any file
 systems.
 Warning
 Specifying --force twice with any of these operations
 might result in data loss. Note that when --force is
 specified twice the selected operation is executed by
 systemctl itself, and the system manager is not contacted.
 This means the command should succeed even when the system
 manager has crashed.
 --message=
 When used with halt, poweroff or reboot, set a short message
 explaining the reason for the operation. The message will be
 logged together with the default shutdown message.
 Added in version 225.
 --now
 When used with enable, disable, mask, or reenable, also
 start/stop/try-restart the units after the specified unit file
 operations succeed.
 Added in version 220.
 --root=
 When used with enable/disable/is-enabled (and related
 commands), use the specified root path when looking for unit
 files. If this option is present, systemctl will operate on
 the file system directly, instead of communicating with the
 systemd daemon to carry out changes.
 --image=image
 Takes a path to a disk image file or block device node. If
 specified, all operations are applied to file system in the
 indicated disk image. This option is similar to --root=, but
 operates on file systems stored in disk images or block
 devices. The disk image should either contain just a file
 system or a set of file systems within a GPT partition table,
 following the Discoverable Partitions Specification[2]. For
 further information on supported disk images, see
 systemd-nspawn(1)'s switch of the same name.
 Added in version 252.
 --image-policy=policy
 Takes an image policy string as argument, as per
 systemd.image-policy(7). The policy is enforced when operating
 on the disk image specified via --image=, see above. If not
 specified, defaults to the "*" policy, i.e. all recognized
 file systems in the image are used.
 --runtime
 When used with enable, disable, edit, (and related commands),
 make changes only temporarily, so that they are lost on the
 next reboot. This will have the effect that changes are not
 made in subdirectories of /etc/ but in /run/, with identical
 immediate effects, however, since the latter is lost on
 reboot, the changes are lost too.
 Similarly, when used with set-property, make changes only
 temporarily, so that they are lost on the next reboot.
 --preset-mode=
 Takes one of "full" (the default), "enable-only",
 "disable-only". When used with the preset or preset-all
 commands, controls whether units shall be disabled and enabled
 according to the preset rules, or only enabled, or only
 disabled.
 Added in version 215.
 -n, --lines=
 When used with status, controls the number of journal lines to
 show, counting from the most recent ones. Takes a positive
 integer argument, or 0 to disable journal output. Defaults to
 10.
 -o, --output=
 When used with status, controls the formatting of the journal
 entries that are shown. For the available choices, see
 journalctl(1). Defaults to "short".
 --firmware-setup
 When used with the reboot, poweroff, or halt command, indicate
 to the system's firmware to reboot into the firmware setup
 interface for the next boot. Note that this functionality is
 not available on all systems.
 Added in version 220.
 --boot-loader-menu=timeout
 When used with the reboot, poweroff, or halt command, indicate
 to the system's boot loader to show the boot loader menu on
 the following boot. Takes a time value as parameter —
 indicating the menu timeout. Pass zero in order to disable the
 menu timeout. Note that not all boot loaders support this
 functionality.
 Added in version 242.
 --boot-loader-entry=ID
 When used with the reboot, poweroff, or halt command, indicate
 to the system's boot loader to boot into a specific boot
 loader entry on the following boot. Takes a boot loader entry
 identifier as argument, or "help" in order to list available
 entries. Note that not all boot loaders support this
 functionality.
 Added in version 242.
 --reboot-argument=
 This switch is used with reboot. The value is architecture and
 firmware specific. As an example, "recovery" might be used to
 trigger system recovery, and "fota" might be used to trigger a
 "firmware over the air" update.
 Added in version 246.
 --plain
 When used with list-dependencies, list-units or list-machines,
 the output is printed as a list instead of a tree, and the
 bullet circles are omitted.
 Added in version 203.
 --timestamp=
 Change the format of printed timestamps. The following values
 may be used:
 pretty (this is the default)
 "Day YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS TZ"
 Added in version 248.
 unix
 "@seconds-since-the-epoch"
 Added in version 251.
 us, μs
 "Day YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.UUUUUU TZ"
 Added in version 248.
 utc
 "Day YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS UTC"
 Added in version 248.
 us+utc, μs+utc
 "Day YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.UUUUUU UTC"
 Added in version 248.
 Added in version 247.
 --mkdir
 When used with bind, creates the destination file or directory
 before applying the bind mount. Note that even though the name
 of this option suggests that it is suitable only for
 directories, this option also creates the destination file
 node to mount over if the object to mount is not a directory,
 but a regular file, device node, socket or FIFO.
 Added in version 248.
 --marked
 Only allowed with reload-or-restart. Enqueues restart jobs for
 all units that have the "needs-restart" mark, and reload jobs
 for units that have the "needs-reload" mark. When a unit
 marked for reload does not support reload, restart will be
 queued. Those properties can be set using set-property
 Markers=....
 Unless --no-block is used, systemctl will wait for the queued
 jobs to finish.
 Added in version 248.
 --read-only
 When used with bind, creates a read-only bind mount.
 Added in version 248.
 --drop-in=NAME
 When used with edit, use NAME as the drop-in file name instead
 of override.conf.
 Added in version 253.
 --when=
 When used with halt, poweroff, reboot or kexec, schedule the
 action to be performed at the given timestamp, which should
 adhere to the syntax documented in systemd.time(7) section
 "PARSING TIMESTAMPS". Specially, if "show" is given, the
 currently scheduled action will be shown, which can be
 canceled by passing an empty string or "cancel". "auto" will
 schedule the action according to maintenance window or one
 minute in the future.
 Added in version 254.
 --stdin
 When used with edit, the contents of the file will be read
 from standard input and the editor will not be launched. In
 this mode, the old contents of the file are completely
 replaced. This is useful to "edit" unit files from scripts:
 $ systemctl edit --drop-in=limits.conf --stdin some-service.service <<EOF
 [Unit]
 AllowedCPUs=7,11
 EOF
 Multiple drop-ins may be "edited" in this mode; the same
 contents will be written to all of them.
 Added in version 256.
 -H, --host=
 Execute the operation remotely. Specify a hostname, or a
 username and hostname separated by "@", to connect to. The
 hostname may optionally be suffixed by a port ssh is listening
 on, separated by ":", and then a container name, separated by
 "/", which connects directly to a specific container on the
 specified host. This will use SSH to talk to the remote
 machine manager instance. Container names may be enumerated
 with machinectl -H HOST. Put IPv6 addresses in brackets.
 -M, --machine=
 Execute operation on a local container. Specify a container
 name to connect to, optionally prefixed by a user name to
 connect as and a separating "@" character. If the special
 string ".host" is used in place of the container name, a
 connection to the local system is made (which is useful to
 connect to a specific user's user bus: "--user
 --machine=lennart@.host"). If the "@" syntax is not used, the
 connection is made as root user. If the "@" syntax is used
 either the left hand side or the right hand side may be
 omitted (but not both) in which case the local user name and
 ".host" are implied.
 -C, --capsule=
 Execute operation on a capsule. Specify a capsule name to
 connect to. See capsule@.service(5) for details about
 capsules.
 Added in version 256.
 --no-ask-password
 Do not query the user for authentication for privileged
 operations.
 --no-pager
 Do not pipe output into a pager.
 --legend=BOOL
 Enable or disable printing of the legend, i.e. column headers
 and the footer with hints. The legend is printed by default,
 unless disabled with --quiet or similar.
 -h, --help
 Print a short help text and exit.
 --version
 Print a short version string and exit.

EXIT STATUS top

 On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.
 systemctl uses the return codes defined by LSB, as defined in LSB
 3.0.0[3].
 Table 5. LSB return codes
 ┌───────┬────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
 │ Value Description in LSB Use in systemd │
 ├───────┼────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
 │ 0 │ "program is │ unit is active │
 │ │ running or service │ │
 │ │ is OK" │ │
 ├───────┼────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
 │ 1 │ "program is dead │ unit not failed │
 │ │ and /var/run pid │ (used by │
 │ │ file exists" │ is-failed) │
 ├───────┼────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
 │ 2 │ "program is dead │ unused │
 │ │ and /var/lock lock │ │
 │ │ file exists" │ │
 ├───────┼────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
 │ 3 │ "program is not │ unit is not active │
 │ │ running" │ │
 ├───────┼────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
 │ 4 │ "program or │ no such unit │
 │ │ service status is │ │
 │ │ unknown" │ │
 └───────┴────────────────────┴────────────────────┘
 The mapping of LSB service states to systemd unit states is
 imperfect, so it is better to not rely on those return values but
 to look for specific unit states and substates instead.

ENVIRONMENT top

 $SYSTEMD_EDITOR
 Editor to use when editing units; overrides $EDITOR and
 $VISUAL. If neither $SYSTEMD_EDITOR nor $EDITOR nor $VISUAL
 are present or if it is set to an empty string or if their
 execution failed, systemctl will try to execute well known
 editors in this order: editor(1), nano(1), vim(1), vi(1).
 Added in version 218.
 $SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL
 The maximum log level of emitted messages (messages with a
 higher log level, i.e. less important ones, will be
 suppressed). Takes a comma-separated list of values. A value
 may be either one of (in order of decreasing importance)
 emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, debug, or an
 integer in the range 0...7. See syslog(3) for more
 information. Each value may optionally be prefixed with one of
 console, syslog, kmsg or journal followed by a colon to set
 the maximum log level for that specific log target (e.g.
 SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug,console:info specifies to log at debug
 level except when logging to the console which should be at
 info level). Note that the global maximum log level takes
 priority over any per target maximum log levels.
 $SYSTEMD_LOG_COLOR
 A boolean. If true, messages written to the tty will be
 colored according to priority.
 This setting is only useful when messages are written directly
 to the terminal, because journalctl(1) and other tools that
 display logs will color messages based on the log level on
 their own.
 $SYSTEMD_LOG_TIME
 A boolean. If true, console log messages will be prefixed with
 a timestamp.
 This setting is only useful when messages are written directly
 to the terminal or a file, because journalctl(1) and other
 tools that display logs will attach timestamps based on the
 entry metadata on their own.
 $SYSTEMD_LOG_LOCATION
 A boolean. If true, messages will be prefixed with a filename
 and line number in the source code where the message
 originates.
 Note that the log location is often attached as metadata to
 journal entries anyway. Including it directly in the message
 text can nevertheless be convenient when debugging programs.
 $SYSTEMD_LOG_TARGET
 The destination for log messages. One of console (log to the
 attached tty), console-prefixed (log to the attached tty but
 with prefixes encoding the log level and "facility", see
 syslog(3), kmsg (log to the kernel circular log buffer),
 journal (log to the journal), journal-or-kmsg (log to the
 journal if available, and to kmsg otherwise), auto (determine
 the appropriate log target automatically, the default), null
 (disable log output).
 $SYSTEMD_PAGER, $PAGER
 Pager to use when --no-pager is not given. $SYSTEMD_PAGER is
 used if set; otherwise $PAGER is used. If neither
 $SYSTEMD_PAGER nor $PAGER are set, a set of well-known pager
 implementations is tried in turn, including less(1) and
 more(1), until one is found. If no pager implementation is
 discovered, no pager is invoked. Setting those environment
 variables to an empty string or the value "cat" is equivalent
 to passing --no-pager.
 Note: if $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set, $SYSTEMD_PAGER and
 $PAGER can only be used to disable the pager (with "cat" or
 ""), and are otherwise ignored.
 $SYSTEMD_LESS
 Override the options passed to less (by default "FRSXMK").
 Users might want to change two options in particular:
 K
 This option instructs the pager to exit immediately when
 Ctrl+C is pressed. To allow less to handle Ctrl+C itself
 to switch back to the pager command prompt, unset this
 option.
 If the value of $SYSTEMD_LESS does not include "K", and
 the pager that is invoked is less, Ctrl+C will be ignored
 by the executable, and needs to be handled by the pager.
 X
 This option instructs the pager to not send termcap
 initialization and deinitialization strings to the
 terminal. It is set by default to allow command output to
 remain visible in the terminal even after the pager exits.
 Nevertheless, this prevents some pager functionality from
 working, in particular paged output cannot be scrolled
 with the mouse.
 Note that setting the regular $LESS environment variable has
 no effect for less invocations by systemd tools.
 See less(1) for more discussion.
 $SYSTEMD_LESSCHARSET
 Override the charset passed to less (by default "utf-8", if
 the invoking terminal is determined to be UTF-8 compatible).
 Note that setting the regular $LESSCHARSET environment
 variable has no effect for less invocations by systemd tools.
 $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE
 Common pager commands like less(1), in addition to "paging",
 i.e. scrolling through the output, support opening of or
 writing to other files and running arbitrary shell commands.
 When commands are invoked with elevated privileges, for
 example under sudo(8) or pkexec(1), the pager becomes a
 security boundary. Care must be taken that only programs with
 strictly limited functionality are used as pagers, and
 unintended interactive features like opening or creation of
 new files or starting of subprocesses are not allowed. "Secure
 mode" for the pager may be enabled as described below, if the
 pager supports that (most pagers are not written in a way that
 takes this into consideration). It is recommended to either
 explicitly enable "secure mode" or to completely disable the
 pager using --no-pager or PAGER=cat when allowing untrusted
 users to execute commands with elevated privileges.
 This option takes a boolean argument. When set to true, the
 "secure mode" of the pager is enabled. In "secure mode",
 LESSSECURE=1 will be set when invoking the pager, which
 instructs the pager to disable commands that open or create
 new files or start new subprocesses. Currently only less(1) is
 known to understand this variable and implement "secure mode".
 When set to false, no limitation is placed on the pager.
 Setting SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE=0 or not removing it from the
 inherited environment may allow the user to invoke arbitrary
 commands.
 When $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set, systemd tools attempt to
 automatically figure out if "secure mode" should be enabled
 and whether the pager supports it. "Secure mode" is enabled if
 the effective UID is not the same as the owner of the login
 session, see geteuid(2) and sd_pid_get_owner_uid(3), or when
 running under sudo(8) or similar tools ($SUDO_UID is set [4]).
 In those cases, SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE=1 will be set and pagers
 which are not known to implement "secure mode" will not be
 used at all. Note that this autodetection only covers the most
 common mechanisms to elevate privileges and is intended as
 convenience. It is recommended to explicitly set
 $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE or disable the pager.
 Note that if the $SYSTEMD_PAGER or $PAGER variables are to be
 honoured, other than to disable the pager,
 $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE must be set too.
 $SYSTEMD_COLORS
 Takes a boolean argument. When true, systemd and related
 utilities will use colors in their output, otherwise the
 output will be monochrome. Additionally, the variable can take
 one of the following special values: "16", "256" to restrict
 the use of colors to the base 16 or 256 ANSI colors,
 respectively. This can be specified to override the automatic
 decision based on $TERM and what the console is connected to.
 $SYSTEMD_URLIFY
 The value must be a boolean. Controls whether clickable links
 should be generated in the output for terminal emulators
 supporting this. This can be specified to override the
 decision that systemd makes based on $TERM and other
 conditions.

SEE ALSO top

 systemd(1), journalctl(1), loginctl(1), machinectl(1),
 systemd.unit(5), systemd.resource-control(5), systemd.special(7),
 wall(1), systemd.preset(5), systemd.generator(7), glob(7)

NOTES top

 1. Boot Loader Specification
 https://uapi-group.org/specifications/specs/boot_loader_specification
 2. Discoverable Partitions Specification
 https://uapi-group.org/specifications/specs/discoverable_partitions_specification
 3. LSB 3.0.0
 http://refspecs.linuxbase.org/LSB_3.0.0/LSB-PDA/LSB-PDA/iniscrptact.html
 4. It is recommended for other tools to set and check $SUDO_UID
 as appropriate, treating it is a common interface.

COLOPHON top

 This page is part of the systemd (systemd system and service
 manager) project. Information about the project can be found at
 ⟨http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd⟩. If you have a
 bug report for this manual page, see
 ⟨http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/#bugreports⟩.
 This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
 ⟨https://github.com/systemd/systemd.git⟩ on 2025年08月11日. (At that
 time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
 repository was 2025年08月11日.) If you discover any rendering
 problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there is
 a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
 corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
 (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
 man-pages@man7.org
systemd 258~rc2 SYSTEMCTL(1)

Pages that refer to this page: bootctl(1), hostnamectl(1), htop(1), journalctl(1), localectl(1), loginctl(1), pcp-check(1), pcpintro(1), pmie(1), pmlogger(1), run0(1), systemd(1), systemd-analyze(1), systemd-ask-password(1), systemd-cat(1), systemd-cgls(1), systemd-cgtop(1), systemd-escape(1), systemd-mount(1), systemd-notify(1), systemd-run(1), systemd-tty-ask-password-agent(1), timedatectl(1), reboot(2), sd_notify(3), capsule@.service(5), org.freedesktop.LogControl1(5), org.freedesktop.login1(5), org.freedesktop.systemd1(5), srp_daemon_port@.service(5), srp_daemon.service(5), systemd.automount(5), systemd.device(5), systemd.exec(5), systemd.kill(5), systemd.mount(5), systemd.path(5), systemd.preset(5), systemd.service(5), systemd.socket(5), systemd.swap(5), systemd.target(5), systemd.timer(5), systemd.unit(5), daemon(7), systemd-boot(7), systemd.directives(7), systemd.environment-generator(7), systemd.generator(7), systemd.index(7), systemd.special(7), systemd.time(7), autofs(8), poweroff(8), shutdown(8), systemd-debug-generator(8), systemd-environment-d-generator(8), systemd-machined.service(8), systemd-poweroff.service(8), systemd-rc-local-generator(8), systemd-run-generator(8), systemd-socket-proxyd(8), systemd-soft-reboot.service(8), systemd-suspend.service(8)



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