Thanks for all the help. At this point it really only works the original way. Let the login prompt appear, and have the service continue to start. So I will talk to the other folks on the project to see if that is acceptable. Thanks againKM
From: Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org Sent: Thursday, August 4, 2016 5:10 PM Subject: Re: [CentOS] centos 7- boot doesn't wait for startup script to complete
On Aug 4, 2016, at 14:35, KM info4km@yahoo.com wrote:
thank you for the feedback. I tried using Before=systemd-user-sessions.service. At first glance it seems to work, but then the oracle DB shuts down. Note that myservices starts oracle and then does a few things for our application. When I remove that entry, it goes right to the login as I originally described, but the oracle DB does not shut down. maybe I have the wrong combination of timeout options with this other option or something, although the timeouts seemed to work also. Just thought I'd throw it out there. In either case, thanks for helping. I looked online for an explanation of the options for these files, other that the systemd manual page which is hard to use. I really couldn't find one. Any suggestions? Thanks again.KM
Is your service still a oneshot type? If you are starting daemonized services, systemd is probably terminating them. You should use a 'forking' type for services that will keep around processes.
From: Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org Sent: Tuesday, August 2, 2016 9:28 AM Subject: Re: [CentOS] centos 7- boot doesn't wait for startup script to complete
On Tue, Aug 02, 2016 at 12:56:21PM +0000, KM wrote: # used to set up the Myservices onstartup [Unit] Description=Start and stop Myservices
[Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/etc/init.d/Myservices start ExecStop=/etc/init.d/Myservices stop RemainAfterExit=yes
[Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Reformatting so it is readable.
What you probably want to do is to add something to the [Unit] section to make the completion of the be a requirement for the user login service. Something like:
Before=systemd-user-sessions.service
You will most likely also need to add a TimeoutStartSec= to your [Service] section to give it a longer time to run before systemd times out the service start.
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