On Tue, 05.10.10 18:25, Michael Biebl ([email protected]) wrote: > > 2010/10/5 <[email protected]>: > > From: Fabiano Fidencio <[email protected]> > > > > This functions are working as follows: > > - Send a SIGTERM to all processes that may be finished. > > - Send a SIGKILL to all processes that still live and > > may be finished. > > - Try to mount all mount points > ^ unmount, I guess > > > - Try to remount read-only all mount points that can't > > be umounted > > - Umount all swap devices. > > - Call [poweroff|halt|reboot|kexec] > > Just to be sure: > There still will be a separate killall service and unmounting in halt > is only a last resort, i.e. > mount points handled by systemd should already be unmounted when this > binary is called?
Yes and no. The normal service handling should make sure that normal services should not be around anymore when this code is invoked. However, there's stuff that's not exactly "normal services". Most prominently user sessions. To cover those I plan to add a service that kills all user sessions on shutdown very early, i.e. before we kill all the services. That's something that has been missing in sysv for quite a while and we now can add that here for the first time. And then there's everything that moves itself to a different cgroup in the systemd hierarchy. Which privileged code might do. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering - Red Hat, Inc. _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
