On Mon, Nov 4, 2013 at 4:07 PM, Wayne S <linux@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > my apologies for improperly sending email to list. > > My question is how to properly use systemd --test: > > From the website: http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/TipsAndTricks/ > > It suggests to run this to see what would execute on boot for a unit: > > # systemd --test --system --unit=multi-user.target > > If I run this as root, I get command not found. So it is not in $PATH. > > If I run as root I get don't run as root: > > # /usr/lib/systemd/systemd --test --system --unit=multi-user.target > Don't run test mode as root. > > If I run as user, I get a bunch of errors: > > $ /usr/lib/systemd/systemd --test --system --unit=multi-user.target > systemd 208 running in system mode. (+PAM -LIBWRAP -AUDIT -SELINUX -IMA -SYSVINIT +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +ACL +XZ) > Failed to set hostname to <arch-t3400>: Operation not permitted > Failed to open /dev/tty0: Permission denied > Failed to create root cgroup hierarchy: Permission denied > Failed to allocate manager object: Permission denied > > Is there a way to use this command properly? > > Wayne I'm not a systemd guru, but try 'systemctl list-dependencies multi-user.target'.