>>> Lennart Poettering <lennart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> schrieb am 01.09.2020 um 16:30 in Nachricht <20200901143043.GA264071@gardel-login>: > On Mo, 31.08.20 17:34, Joshua Miller (joshuamiller01@xxxxxxxxx) wrote: > >> Is there a way to set per‑user defaults for values in systemd.conf? e.g. >> I'd like to set DefaultLimitMEMLOCK for the 'app' user (User=app), such >> that all units run as User=app get the setting. > > Something like that does not exist. The question is: Should it be done when starting some process? If so, I guess the unit file could apply the limits. If it should be done for a user session, then Lennart mentioned how to do it. > >> I'm looking for a way to do what's done via pam_limits per limits.conf >> (e.g. `username hard nofile 512`) > > Nope, that's not what limits.conf does. limits.conf is only applied by > pam_limits, i.e. whenever a PAM session is opened. And that typically > means at login‑time. (Some sloppy init scripts might have used "su" to > request a PAM login session even for system services back in sysv, but > that's really sloppy, people should use "setpriv" for that). > > Anyway, do you want this for login users or for system services? > Initially your reference to User= suggests the latter, but your > reference to PAM suggests the former. What is it now? > > You can use PAMName= in service unit files to allocate a PAM session > for them too (and thus also go through pam_limits if you configure the > stack like that). But it's a bit of a misuse to do so, given that PAM > isn't really what system services should bother with. > > Lennart > > ‑‑ > Lennart Poettering, Berlin > _______________________________________________ > 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