[CentOS] Running a command at startup
Kenneth Porter
shiva at sewingwitch.comThu Dec 13 19:38:37 UTC 2018
- Previous message: [CentOS] Running a command at startup
- Next message: [CentOS] Running a command at startup
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
--On Wednesday, December 12, 2018 7:04 PM -0500 Robert Moskowitz <rgm at htt-consult.com> wrote: > So can someone point me to how to make this into a simple systemd service? I'd first create a utility script (untried code!) like this: /usr/local/sbin/BlueLedFunction.sh #!/bin/sh echo "$1" > /sys/class/leds/blue\:heartbeat/trigger Then I'd create /etc/systemd/system/BlueLedOff.service with appropriate sections to invoke that script with "none" as an argument and to run in your desired runlevel. (Take a look at the examples in /lib/systemd/system.) Then issue this to have it run at startup: systemctl enable BlueLedOff Note that custom unit files go in /etc/systemd/system to avoid having them overwritten by distro updates. You can customize existing unit files by either copying them from /lib/systemd to /etc/systemd or you can override single settings with specially-named subdirectories in /etc/systemd/system. See the unit file documentation for details.
- Previous message: [CentOS] Running a command at startup
- Next message: [CentOS] Running a command at startup
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the CentOS mailing list