On Fr, 12.10.18 03:57, Michael Biebl (mbiebl@xxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > > is there a reliable way to check from a shell script that udevd is > > > running and able to serve request? > > > Say you want to run "udevadm trigger" but only if udevd is actually > > > able to process that request. > > > > > > There is a udev_ctrl_send_ping() function, which looks like it could > > > be perhaps used for those. Unfortunately this is not exposed via > > > "udevadm control" > > > > systemctl is-running systemd-udevd-kernel.socket > > I forgot to add, that systemd-udevd is not necessarily started by > systemd in this particular case. So I can't use systemctl... Well, that depends on the init system you want to use, so consider asking their community for help, how they allow you to check whether a socket is started up correctly (or a service, in case socket activation is not supported). For legacy systems udevd still supports forking things into the background, hence if you know when the udevd starter process (i.e. the "parent") exits then you should know when the service is up. Either way, this is really out of scope for systemd, it's a question you can only answer in the context of the init system used, as on socket activation capable systems udev will be able to process events that happen even before the daemon itself is up while on legacy systems the daemon must be up first. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering, Red Hat _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel