On 20 June 2012 18:28, Tom Gundersen <teg@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On Jun 20, 2012 6:05 PM, "Lukáš Jirkovský" <l.jirkovsky@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Hello, >> before submitting bug report I want to make sure this isn't feature. >> My problem is that my /tmp folder is no longer cleaned up during boot. >> Now I have to do that manually which is really annoying. >> >> I dug through the git of initscripts and it seems to be caused by the >> replacement of the original code by the systemd-tmpfiles tool. I've >> just tried to run systemd-tmpfiles manually and it seems that it is >> not able to do even a simple task such as rm -rf /tmp/*. > > There was a slight change in behavior. Earlier we would delete all files at > boot, now we (or rather systemd-tmpfiles on our behalf) delete all 'old > files'. That is, all files that have not been accessed within the last then > days. > > This behavior is configured in /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf. To change the > behavior, copy the file to /etc/tmpfiles.d/ and edit it there. You can > easily configure it to get the old behavior back. > > Alternatively, you could put /tmp on a tmpfs, to throw away all contents on > reboot; or create a cron job that calls systemd-tmpfiles regularly (say > once a day) to also delete old files at runtime, rather than only at boot. > > Check 'man tmpfiles.d' for more details. > > Cheers, > > Tom Already did that. I changed the config to: d /tmp 1777 root root 0d d /var/tmp 1777 root root 0d but it doesn't clean anything.