> -----Original Message-----
> From: arch-general [mailto:arch-general-boun...@archlinux.org] On Behalf
> Of Lukas Jirkovsky
> Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2014 3:54 AM
>
> Please don't start another systemd flamewar. And BTW, automatic /tmp
> cleaning was there since the beginning.

I agree to not start a flamewar but hopefully systemd devs do not consider 
their SW as perfect and are looking to improve it by taking into consideration 
the userbase complains about it.

Maybe automatic /tmp cleaning was there since the beginning but it appears that 
it never worked on my systems until very recently after using ArchLinux for 
over 2 years.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: arch-general [mailto:arch-general-boun...@archlinux.org] On Behalf
> Of Paul Gideon Dann
> Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2014 5:26 AM
>
> On Thursday 08 May 2014 09:53:41 Lukas Jirkovsky wrote:
> > On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:46 AM, Christos Nouskas <n...@archlinux.us>
> wrote:
> > > On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois <oliv...@olivierlanglois.net> wrote:
> > >> Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago
> > >> this new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically
> > >> clean /tmp directory daily. This is not something that I like as I
> > >> prefer to decide when to clean up and to manually perform the clean
> up.
>
> The /tmp directory is intended for temporary files, after all. If you need 
> them
> to stick around, I'd recommend using /var/tmp. But yeah, masking the unit
> file should solve this for you, I think.

I was forecasting that this comment would come when I wrote the original 
request. While I agree with what you say, I think that it is reasonable to let 
the user have the control over when it is cleaned. Without denaturing the /tmp 
folder, I'm using it to experiment patches on some packages or launch 
computation and store results into /tmp to return back at them the next 
morning. I have been a bit shocked to find out one morning that my files have 
been deleted by my system. IMHO, this goes against the rule of least surprise 
which is a pillar of the unix philosophy.

I understand that for some sysadmins it might be convenient to have an 
automatic cleanup but IMHO they should explicitly set it up. I am not too sure 
that this is a good default behavior.

That being said, I'll try to mask the service. Thank you very much for your 
replies.

Greetings,
Olivier

Please ignore the confidentiality notice below.
It is automatically added without my consent.

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