I run multiple copies of sec in order to independently monitor multiple log files. I'm moving to Fedora 20, and I'd like to run sec from systemd instead of using init.d shell scripts.
Fedora (and all other distros I've seen) provide a sample sec.service file that just runs a single instance of sec. I think what I need to do is copy the supplied sec.service once for each instance of sec I want to run, and modify it to have the specific parameters I want. Then I'd never start sec.service itself, but only start my copied (and renamed) service files. I don't think using systemd "instantiated services" (aka templates) buys me anything, because I can't individually control the parameters to each sec instance with enough granularity. Anyway, I'm just asking here to see if anyone has given this any thought, and maybe came to a different conclusion. I've searched the archives, and while there's some systemd chatter, I couldn't find anything talking about systemd and multiple sec instances. Thanks. Eric. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce. Perforce version control. Predictably reliable. http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=157508191&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ Simple-evcorr-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/simple-evcorr-users
