I ran *"systemctl enable test.service" *but when I restart it shows only that the service is only enabled but not active and running.
Here is the status of test.service *? test.service - Hey Bings* * Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/test.service; enabled)* * Active: inactive (dead)* For *WantedBy= *which attribute should be given, whether it is "default.target" or the default target of the system ? Running *systemctl get-default* shows graphical.target as the default target. -- Regards, Raghavendra. H. R (Raghu) On Wed, Oct 5, 2016 at 2:59 PM, Andrei Borzenkov <arvidj...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Wed, Oct 5, 2016 at 12:23 PM, Raghavendra. H. R <raghuh...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > Hi All, > > > > I'm a newbie in Systemd init system and I'm trying to auto boot/start my > > service in systemd. But my service gets only enabled and it never runs > > automatically. > > > > I modifying my unit file to depend on sysinit.target and > multi-user.target > > by making use of I used After= this also didnt help. > > > > I would like to do something in my unit file from which systemd starts my > > service automatically after starting it's own system related services. > > > > There is no such thing as "own systemd services". All services are > equal (but some are more equal than others :) > > > Can anyone help me regarding this ? > > > > > > My sample service > > ============= > > [Unit] > > Description=Hey Bings > > > > [Service] > > ExecStart="Run an executable" > > > > [Install] > > WantedBy=multi-user.target or sysinit.target > > > > sysinit.target is wrong, it should never be used for normal service. > multi-user.target should work as long as it is your default target (or > dependency of default target). > > You did run "systemctl enable your.service", did not you? What > "systemctl status your.service" says? >
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