A System and Session Manager
Systemd is a system and service manager, compatible with SysV and LSB
init scripts for Linux. systemd provides aggressive parallelization
capabilities, uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services,
offers on-demand starting of daemons, keeps track of processes using
Linux cgroups, supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state,
maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate
transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a
drop-in replacement for sysvinit.
- Developed at Base:System
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
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Revision 392 (latest revision is 426)
Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar_suse)
accepted
request 1090446
from
Franck Bui (fbui)
(revision 392)
- Import commit 07bb12a282b0ea378850934c4a76008b448b8bad (merge of v253.5) For a complete list of changes, visit: https://github.com/openSUSE/systemd/compare/25aec157888f7aa9a36726962fcbbf2c74ead440...07bb12a282b0ea378850934c4a76008b448b8bad - Reexecute user managers on package updates. For now we send signal to user instances to trigger their reexecution. It's asynchronous but it shouldn't cause any problem in practice and it's probably safer than triggering reexecution with "systemctl --user -M 1000@ daemon-reexec" command. The latter command creates a new PAM session behind the scene bringing with it the known issue (upstream issue #8598) with "(sd-pam)" helper process when the PAM session is being closed.
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