On 09.06.2014 09:33, Leho Kraav wrote:
After upgrading systemd 208 -> 212, every single cron job creates this
flood in systemd journal:

juuni 09 09:20:01 xps14 crond[15112]: pam_unix(crond:session): session
opened for user root by (uid=0)
juuni 09 09:20:01 xps14 systemd[15113]: pam_unix(systemd-user:session):
session opened for user root by (uid=0)
juuni 09 09:20:01 xps14 systemd[1]: Starting user-0.slice.
> ...
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 systemd[1]: Started User Manager for UID 0.
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 CROND[15116]: (root) CMD (test -x
/usr/sbin/run-crons && /usr/sbin/run-crons )
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 CROND[15112]: pam_unix(crond:session): session
closed for user root
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 systemd[1]: Stopping User Manager for UID 0...
> ...
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 systemd[1]: Stopped User Manager for UID 0.
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 systemd[1]: Stopping user-0.slice.
juuni 09 09:20:02 xps14 systemd[1]: Removed slice user-0.slice.

Another related question to trying to filter this output: why some lines are logged with program "crond" and some "CROND"?

With "loginctl linger-enable" a shorter version of a cron run looks like this now:

...
juuni 10 19:30:01 xps14 crond[21310]: pam_unix(crond:session): session opened for user root by (uid=0) juuni 10 19:30:01 xps14 CROND[21311]: (root) CMD (test -x /usr/sbin/run-crons && /usr/sbin/run-crons )
juuni 10 19:30:01 xps14 systemd[1]: Starting Session 99 of user root.
juuni 10 19:30:01 xps14 systemd[1]: Started Session 99 of user root.
juuni 10 19:30:01 xps14 CROND[21310]: pam_unix(crond:session): session closed for user root
...

I am considering filtering "crond" out of the human-visible status window and that's how the uppercase vs lowercase question arose.
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