On Sep 10, 2014 5:46 PM, "Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek" <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Tue, Sep 09, 2014 at 07:39:17PM -0400, Chris Morgan wrote: > > >> >> Specifically, running `systemd --user` directly is not supported > > >> >> anymore. The user mode still works, but only for one "user" instance > > >> >> per UID, launched through user@<uid>.service (recent releases start > > >> >> this automatically upon logging in). > > > Try 'systemctl --user'. If this start you can put units > > > it ~/.config/systemd/user/ or a similar path (check systemd.unit(5) out). > > > > > > Zbyszek > > > > I tried --user but I get some errors that I pasted above. It looks > > like it is no longer supported but I'm not sure. > > If you're getting the same message as above, you are still typing > systemd instead of systemctl. > > Zbyszek
Ahh. The man page seemed to indicate that one should run systemd with --user first. I was able to run unit files via systemctl --user but the SYSTEMD_USER_PATH environment variable doesn't seem to be working, even though it is mentioned in the man page. If I place them in ~/.config/systemd/units they are recognized. I'm going to try a symlink from there to where I was hoping to point via SYSTEMD_USER_PATH. Should I be setting XDG_CONFIG_HOME? I was looking to put the files at ~/somegitrepo/units/ Chris
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