On Wed, Jan 18, 2023 at 12:25:03PM +0100, Jesper Dybdal wrote: > I have now, in order: > * Disabled bind9.service > * Corrected /etc/default/named so the named service can start (it was > missing the chroot) > * Stopped bind9.service > * Started named.service and checked that named i actually running > * Deleted /etc/systemd/system/bind9.service > * Deleted /etc/default/bind9 > * Run systemctl daemon-reload > * Checked that "systemctl restart named.service" works > > That leaves one file in the system with the name "bind9.service": > /var/lib/systemd/deb-systemd-helper-enabled/multi-user.target.wants/bind9.service > Can I safely delete that one (I suspect so)? Will it be a problem during > reboot if I leave it?
I've never had to worry about the files in there. I suspect it'll get removed when you reboot, if you don't remove it yourself. In any case, the files in that directory are all 0 bytes long -- it's just their names that matter. So replacing it would be simple, if for some reason removing it causes an issue. (Which I seriously doubt it will.)