24.04.2020 16:57, John пишет: > I'd like to have systemd (user mode) call a bash script with different > tokens under two conditions: > 1) When the user starts/stops a service (token would be either "sync" > or "unsync") > 2) When a timer tells it to run (token would be "sync") > > Thus far, I have been accomplishing these with 1 service and 1 > service/timer combo: > > All three files can be found here for reference: > https://github.com/graysky2/profile-sync-daemon/tree/ce290b54069b015879f53d631f82ed97bfe73d47/init > > So the user starts psd.service and both psd-resync.{service,timer} get > activated and run as expected. The problem is when the script that > psd.service calls ends in an error state... ps.service does not call any script on startup. > > 1) psd.service remains in an active state > 2) psd-resync.timer remains active > > I'd like: > 1) both psd.service and psd-resync.service to both end in an error state. > 2) psd-resync.timer to get deactivated > Assuming service that fails is psd-resync.service, as far as I can tell the only way is to add BindsTo=psd-resync.service to both psd.service and psd-resync.timer. > I've been through the man pages for systemd.service and systemd.timer > to the point where I am confused who to achieve this. What is the > right strategy using services and a timer to deliver on this? > _______________________________________________ > systemd-devel mailing list > systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel > _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel