Services
2017/07/16 |
[1] | It's possible to display services' status like follows. |
# the list of services which are active [root@dlp ~]# systemctl -t service UNIT LOAD ACTIVE SUB DESCRIPTION abrt-journal-core.service loaded active running Creates ABRT problems from abrt-oops.service loaded active running ABRT kernel log watcher abrt-xorg.service loaded active running ABRT Xorg log watcher abrtd.service loaded active running ABRT Automated Bug Reporti atd.service loaded active running Job spooling tools auditd.service loaded active running Security Auditing Service blk-availability.service loaded active exited Availability of block devi chronyd.service loaded active running NTP client/server crond.service loaded active running Command Scheduler ..... ..... # the list of all services [root@dlp ~]# systemctl list-unit-files -t service UNIT FILE STATE abrt-ccpp.service disabled abrt-journal-core.service enabled abrt-oops.service enabled abrt-pstoreoops.service disabled abrt-vmcore.service enabled abrt-xorg.service enabled abrtd.service enabled arp-ethers.service disabled atd.service enabled auditd.service enabled ..... ..... |
[2] | Stop and turn OFF auto-start setting for a service if you don'd need it. (it's smartd as an example below) |
[root@dlp ~]# systemctl stop smartd [root@dlp ~]# systemctl disable smartd |
[3] | There are some SysV services yet. Those are controled by chkconfig like follows. |
[root@dlp ~]# chkconfig --list Note: This output shows SysV services only and does not include native systemd services. SysV configuration data might be overridden by native systemd configuration. If you want to list systemd services use 'systemctl list-unit-files'. To see services enabled on particular target use 'systemctl list-dependencies [target]'. netconsole 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off network 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off # for exmaple, turn OFF auto-start setting for netconsole [root@dlp ~]# chkconfig netconsole off |