On Mon, 18.03.13 09:49, Britton Kerin ([email protected]) wrote: > Hi everyone, I just had my first encounter with systemd and all in all I'm > highly impressed. > > One thing saddened me a bit though: its not obvious what to do if I just want > to start a service or do something *after* all the stuff that shipped with ths > OS has happened and the system is fully operational. I found some email from > long ago stating that systemd devs thought this would not be a sane feature to > provide, I don't know if that's true but if it is I don't understand the > logic. > > Whenever I have to go into init systems I always want exactly that. And its > always surprisingly painful. This is the #1 use outside of OS devel. context > that the init system is going to see, so it seems to me that is should be > supported, and probably be the first thing in the manual as well.
Colin already said most of what I would say. But one addition. Normal services tend to be ordered before multi-user.target and graphical.target, so you could add your unit to these targets too, but order them explicitly *after* the targets, rather then the implied before. Just use "After=multi-user.target graphical.target". Note however that actually doesn't really put something "last". It just puts something after all normal services are running, and if there are many units like that then they will run in parallel. In general, thinking about "last" is usually a hack. You probably want to think about proper dependencies, and declare those. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering - Red Hat, Inc. _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
