Hey Mukul,

on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS you need to copy openmeetings.service to
/etc/systemd/system

I guess you need to modify it. Have a look inside.

After modifying you need to issue a

sudo systemctl daemon-reload

if you do use some other linux system google around for hints like, how
to implement your own startup script for systemd ....

Have fun,

Kaffeesurrogat



On 09/09/2020 18:40, Mukul Shukla wrote:
> When I try to run  sudo systemctl enable openmeetings
>
> I get this message:
>
> Failed to enable unit: Unit file openmeetings.service does not exist.
>
> On Wed, Sep 9, 2020 at 9:37 PM Maxim Solodovnik <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
>     Hello,
>
>     I personally using this
>     script: 
> https://github.com/apache/openmeetings/blob/master/openmeetings-server/src/main/assembly/scripts/openmeetings.service
>     At Ubuntu
>     the instructions to start stop are in
>     comments 
> https://github.com/apache/openmeetings/blob/master/openmeetings-server/src/main/assembly/scripts/openmeetings.service#L15
>
>     To enable autostart you need to run `sudo systemctl enable
>     openmeetings`
>
>     In case regular `init.d` script is used you need to run something like
>     `sudo update-rc.d tomcat3 defaults`
>
>
>     On Wed, 9 Sep 2020 at 21:12, Mukul Shukla <[email protected]
>     <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
>         Dear All,
>
>         I have installed the latest instance of OpenMeetings on Ubuntu
>         20.04 using the Wiki guide. Everytime the machine comes up I
>         have to run the command /etc/init.d/tomcat3 start.
>
>         Is there a way to start all the services automatically of the
>         OpenMeetings including tomcat on Ubuntu Server 20.04?
>
>         Thanks
>
>         Mukul
>
>
>
>     -- 
>     Best regards,
>     Maxim
>


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