On 07/07/2014 01:10 PM, David Benfell wrote:
Adrian Sevcenco writes:
>
> moreover you can separately configure a service without modifying the
> .service file (which usually is linked in /etc/systemd) :
Possibly my information is out of date. I thought you were to put such
service files in /etc/systemd/system and systemctl looks here first when
yeah,
exactly! i just did not mention the full path
told to enable a service (which is to say, a service file in
/etc/systemd/system will supercede one in /usr/lib/systemd/system at the
time of an enable command).
yes, this is correct.. i was mentioning that for
foobar.service you can
make a directory named foobar.service.d in which in .conf files will be
parsed to modify the default settings from foobar.service file.
I know that /etc/systemd/system continues to work. I've been
using it.
i know :)
Adrian