%general-entities; ]> How does Systemd work? Systemd usage Please disregard this page until it is complete and verified. Introduction to Systemd Systemd is a system management daemon designed exclusively for the Linux kernel API. In the Linux startup process, it is the first process to execute in user land; therefore, it is also the parent process of all child processes in user land. Systemd's initialization instructions for each daemon are recorded in a declarative configuration file rather than a shell script. For inter-process communication, systemd makes Unix domain sockets and D-Bus available to the running daemons. Because systemd tracks processes using Linux cgroups instead of process identifiers (PIDs), daemons cannot "escape" systemd; not even by double-forking. Systemd is also capable of aggressive parallelization. Among systemd's auxiliary features are a cron-like job scheduler called systemd Calendar Timers, and an event logging subsystem called journal. The system administrator may choose whether to log system events with systemd or syslog. Systemd's logfile is a binary file. The state of systemd itself can be preserved in a snapshot for future recall. Systemd provides a replacement for sysvinit, pm-utils, inetd, acpid, syslog, watchdog, cron and atd, and obsoletes ConsoleKit. Systemctl systemctl is the main command used to introspect and control systemd. List running units: systemctl or systemctl list-units List failed units: systemctl --failed List available unit files: systemctl list-unit-files Activate a unit immediately: systemctl start unit Stop a unit immediately: systemctl stop unit Restart a unit: systemctl restart unit Reload unit configuration: systemctl reload unit Show status of a unit: systemctl status unit Check if a unit is enabled or disabled: systemctl is-enabled unit Enable a unit to start during boot: systemctl enable unit Disable a unit to not start during boot: systemctl disable unit Reload systemd and scan for new or changed units: systemctl daemon-reload For more information regarding systemd, please refer to the systemd and related man-pages and Systemd at FedoraProject for documentation, examples, features, and other information.