Re: how to keep eth link down across reboots ?
On boot, interfaces are admin-down *by default* until something explicitly brings them up. If you don't configure any network management software to bring eth0 up, then it'll be down. On Thu, Dec 7, 2023, 22:52 lejeczek wrote: > Hi guys. > > Perhaps not strictly _systemd_ question but community here surely is > capable - a matter of me being lucky - how would you keep an Ethernet > link/port powered down? > I was thinking I'll try first _udev_ rules - given other tools/managers > are told to stay away from the link/port > Is there a better, best way to put such link/port down & keep it that way > - naturally, please steer clear of "unplug the cable" type of ideas. > > many thanks, L. >
Re: [systemd-devel] Manual start of user@.service failed with permission denied
On Do, 07.12.23 18:29, Christopher Wong (christopher.w...@axis.com) wrote: > Hi Lennart, > > We are doing the steps to start up a rootless docker. If I don’t set > XDG_RUNTIME_DIR then I will get the below error: > > systemd[1925]: Trying to run as user instance, but $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR > is not set. pam_systemd is responsible for setting this env var. Most likely you are missing that from the PAM stack that is used by this user@.service instance? > The 503 is a system user. So, just to try it out, I created a user, > which got the UID 1001. Using that UID gave me the same result as > the 503. It's a bad idea to run user stuff as system user. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering, Berlin
Re: [systemd-devel] Manual start of user@.service failed with permission denied
Hi Lennart, We are doing the steps to start up a rootless docker. If I don’t set XDG_RUNTIME_DIR then I will get the below error: systemd[1925]: Trying to run as user instance, but $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is not set. The 503 is a system user. So, just to try it out, I created a user, which got the UID 1001. Using that UID gave me the same result as the 503. Best regards, Christopher Wong From: Lennart Poettering Date: Wednesday, 6 December 2023 at 16:50 To: Christopher Wong Cc: systemd-devel@lists.freedesktop.org Subject: Re: [systemd-devel] Manual start of user@.service failed with permission denied On Mi, 06.12.23 14:46, Christopher Wong (christopher.w...@axis.com) wrote: > Hi, > > I’m trying to do the following: > > root@host:~# systemctl set-environment > XDG_RUNTIME_DIR="/run/user/503" Why would you do that? user@.service automatically pulls in user-runtime-dir@.service which is responsible for creating that dir with right perms. is 504 a system user? or a regular user? systemd generally assumes the boundary between system and regular users is between 999 and 1000. But user@.service is really just for regular users, not system users, hence my question. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering, Berlin
how to keep eth link down across reboots ?
Hi guys. Perhaps not strictly _systemd_ question but community here surely is capable - a matter of me being lucky - how would you keep an Ethernet link/port powered down? I was thinking I'll try first _udev_ rules - given other tools/managers are told to stay away from the link/port Is there a better, best way to put such link/port down & keep it that way - naturally, please steer clear of "unplug the cable" type of ideas. many thanks, L.