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diff --git a/man/systemd.exec.xml b/man/systemd.exec.xml
index c08feba27..f79489494 100644
--- a/man/systemd.exec.xml
+++ b/man/systemd.exec.xml
@@ -248,7 +248,7 @@
Controls the CPU
affinity of the executed
processes. Takes a space-separated
- list of CPU indexes. This option may
+ list of CPU indices. This option may
be specified more than once in which
case the specificed CPU affinity masks
are merged. If the empty string is
@@ -340,9 +340,14 @@
The files listed with this
directive will be read shortly before
- the process is executed. Settings from
- these files override settings made
- with
+ the process is executed (more
+ specifically, after all
+ processes from a previous unit state
+ terminated. This means you can
+ generate these files in one unit
+ state, and read it with this option in
+ the next). Settings from these files
+ override settings made with
Environment=. If
the same variable is set twice from
these files, the files will be read in
@@ -472,7 +477,7 @@
StandardError=Controls where file
- descriptor 2 (standard error) of the
+ descriptor 2 (STDERR) of the
executed processes is connected to.
The available options are identical to
those of
@@ -686,31 +691,6 @@
for details.
-
- TCPWrapName=
- If this is a
- socket-activated service, this sets the
- tcpwrap service name to check the
- permission for the current connection
- with. This is only useful in
- conjunction with socket-activated
- services, and stream sockets (TCP) in
- particular. It has no effect on other
- socket types (e.g. datagram/UDP) and
- on processes unrelated to socket-based
- activation. If the tcpwrap
- verification fails, daemon start-up
- will fail and the connection is
- terminated. See
- tcpd8
- for details. Note that this option may
- be used to do access control checks
- only. Shell commands and commands
- described in
- hosts_options5
- are not supported.
-
-
CapabilityBoundingSet=
@@ -837,7 +817,15 @@
may be prefixed with
-, in which case
they will be ignored when they do not
- exist.
+ exist. Note that using this
+ setting will disconnect propagation of
+ mounts from the service to the host
+ (propagation in the opposite direction
+ continues to work). This means that
+ this setting may not be used for
+ services which shall be able to
+ install mount points in the main mount
+ namespace.
@@ -857,18 +845,61 @@
processes via
/tmp or
/var/tmp
- impossible. All temporary data created
- by service will be removed after
- the service is stopped. Defaults to
- false. Note that it is possible to run
- two or more units within the same
- private /tmp and
+ impossible. If this is enabled all
+ temporary files created by a service
+ in these directories will be removed
+ after the service is stopped. Defaults
+ to false. It is possible to run two or
+ more units within the same private
+ /tmp and
/var/tmp
namespace by using the
JoinsNamespaceOf=
directive, see
systemd.unit5
- for details.
+ for details. Note that using this
+ setting will disconnect propagation of
+ mounts from the service to the host
+ (propagation in the opposite direction
+ continues to work). This means that
+ this setting may not be used for
+ services which shall be able to install
+ mount points in the main mount
+ namespace.
+
+
+
+ PrivateDevices=
+
+ Takes a boolean
+ argument. If true, sets up a new /dev
+ namespace for the executed processes
+ and only adds API pseudo devices such
+ as /dev/null,
+ /dev/zero or
+ /dev/random (as
+ well as the pseudo TTY subsystem) to
+ it, but no physical devices such as
+ /dev/sda. This is
+ useful to securely turn off physical
+ device access by the executed
+ process. Defaults to false. Enabling
+ this option will also remove
+ CAP_MKNOD from
+ the capability bounding set for the
+ unit (see above), and set
+ DevicePolicy=closed
+ (see
+ systemd.resource-control5
+ for details). Note that using this
+ setting will disconnect propagation of
+ mounts from the service to the host
+ (propagation in the opposite direction
+ continues to work). This means that
+ this setting may not be used for
+ services which shall be able to
+ install mount points in the main mount
+ namespace.
@@ -884,32 +915,23 @@
available to the executed process.
This is useful to securely turn off
network access by the executed
- process. Defaults to false. Note that
- it is possible to run two or more
- units within the same private network
+ process. Defaults to false. It is
+ possible to run two or more units
+ within the same private network
namespace by using the
JoinsNamespaceOf=
directive, see
systemd.unit5
- for details.
-
-
-
- PrivateDevices=
-
- Takes a boolean
- argument. If true, sets up a new /dev
- namespace for the executed processes
- and only adds API pseudo devices such
- as /dev/null,
- /dev/zero or
- /dev/random to
- it, but no physical devices such as
- /dev/sda. This is
- useful to securely turn off physical
- device access by the executed
- process. Defaults to
- false.
+ for details. Note that this option
+ will disconnect all socket families
+ from the host, this includes
+ AF_NETLINK and AF_UNIX. The latter has
+ the effect that AF_UNIX sockets in the
+ abstract socket namespace will become
+ unavailable to the processes (however,
+ those located in the file system will
+ continue to be
+ accessible).
@@ -920,13 +942,43 @@
,
or
, which
- control whether the file system
- namespace set up for this unit's
- processes will receive or propagate
- new mounts. See
+ control whether mounts in the file
+ system namespace set up for this
+ unit's processes will receive or
+ propagate mounts or unmounts. See
mount2
- for details. Default to
- .
+ for details. Defaults to
+ . Use
+ to ensure that
+ mounts and unmounts are propagated
+ from the host to the container and
+ vice versa. Use
+ to run processes so that none of their
+ mounts and unmounts will propagate to
+ the host. Use
+ to also ensure that no mounts and
+ unmounts from the host will propagate
+ into the unit processes'
+ namespace. Note that
+ means that file
+ systems mounted on the host might stay
+ mounted continously in the unit's
+ namespace, and thus keep the device
+ busy. Note that the file system
+ namespace related options
+ (PrivateTmp=,
+ PrivateDevices=,
+ ReadOnlyDirectories=,
+ InaccessibleDirectories=
+ and
+ ReadWriteDirectories=)
+ require that mount and unmount
+ propagation from the unit's file
+ system namespace is disabled, and
+ hence downgrade
+ to
+ .
+
@@ -967,6 +1019,19 @@
for details.
+
+ AppArmorProfile=
+
+ Takes a profile name as argument.
+ The process executed by the unit will switch to
+ this profile when started. Profiles must already
+ be loaded in the kernel, or the unit will fail.
+ This result in a non operation if AppArmor is not
+ enabled. If prefixed by -, all errors
+ will be ignored.
+
+
+
IgnoreSIGPIPE=
@@ -997,8 +1062,8 @@
SystemCallFilter=
- Takes a space-separated
- list of system call
+ Takes a
+ space-separated list of system call
names. If this setting is used, all
system calls executed by the unit
processes except for the listed ones
@@ -1010,12 +1075,13 @@
the effect is inverted: only the
listed system calls will result in
immediate process termination
- (blacklisting). If this option is used,
+ (blacklisting). If running in user
+ mode and this option is used,
NoNewPrivileges=yes
- is implied. This feature makes use of
- the Secure Computing Mode 2 interfaces
- of the kernel ('seccomp filtering')
- and is useful for enforcing a minimal
+ is implied. This feature makes use of the
+ Secure Computing Mode 2 interfaces of
+ the kernel ('seccomp filtering') and
+ is useful for enforcing a minimal
sandboxing environment. Note that the
execve,
rt_sigreturn,
@@ -1041,23 +1107,15 @@
add or delete the listed system calls
from the set of the filtered system
calls, depending of its type and the
- default action (e.g. You have started
+ default action. (For example, if you have started
with a whitelisting of
read and
write, and right
after it add a blacklisting of
write, then
write will be
- removed from the set).
+ removed from the set.)
-
- Note that setting
- SystemCallFilter=
- implies a
- SystemCallArchitectures=
- setting of native
- (see below), unless that option is
- configured otherwise.
@@ -1071,9 +1129,9 @@
is triggered, instead of terminating
the process immediately. Takes an
error name such as
- EPERM,
- EACCES or
- EUCLEAN. When this
+ EPERM,
+ EACCES or
+ EUCLEAN. When this
setting is not used, or when the empty
string is assigned, the process will be
terminated immediately when the filter
@@ -1088,38 +1146,145 @@
identifiers to include in the system
call filter. The known architecture
identifiers are
- x86,
- x86-64,
- x32,
- arm as well as the
- special identifier
- native. Only system
- calls of the specified architectures
- will be permitted to processes of this
- unit. This is an effective way to
- disable compatibility with non-native
- architectures for processes, for
- example to prohibit execution of 32-bit
- x86 binaries on 64-bit x86-64
- systems. The special
- native identifier
+ x86,
+ x86-64,
+ x32,
+ arm as well as
+ the special identifier
+ native. Only
+ system calls of the specified
+ architectures will be permitted to
+ processes of this unit. This is an
+ effective way to disable compatibility
+ with non-native architectures for
+ processes, for example to prohibit
+ execution of 32-bit x86 binaries on
+ 64-bit x86-64 systems. The special
+ native identifier
implicitly maps to the native
architecture of the system (or more
strictly: to the architecture the
- system manager is compiled for). Note
- that setting this option to a
- non-empty list implies that
- native is included
- too. By default, this option is set to
- the empty list, i.e. no architecture
- system call filtering is applied. Note
- that configuring a system call filter
- with
- SystemCallFilter=
- (above) implies a
- native architecture
- list, unless configured
- otherwise.
+ system manager is compiled for). If
+ running in user mode and this option
+ is used,
+ NoNewPrivileges=yes
+ is implied. Note that setting this
+ option to a non-empty list implies
+ that native is
+ included too. By default, this option
+ is set to the empty list, i.e. no
+ architecture system call filtering is
+ applied.
+
+
+
+ RestrictAddressFamilies=
+
+ Restricts the set of
+ socket address families accessible to
+ the processes of this unit. Takes a
+ space-separated list of address family
+ names to whitelist, such as
+ AF_UNIX,
+ AF_INET or
+ AF_INET6. When
+ prefixed with ~
+ the listed address families will be
+ applied as blacklist, otherwise as
+ whitelist. Note that this restricts
+ access to the
+ socket2
+ system call only. Sockets passed into
+ the process by other means (for
+ example, by using socket activation
+ with socket units, see
+ systemd.socket5)
+ are unaffected. Also, sockets created
+ with socketpair()
+ (which creates connected AF_UNIX
+ sockets only) are unaffected. Note
+ that this option has no effect on
+ 32-bit x86 and is ignored (but works
+ correctly on x86-64). If running in user
+ mode and this option is used,
+ NoNewPrivileges=yes
+ is implied. By default no
+ restriction applies, all address
+ families are accessible to
+ processes. If assigned the empty
+ string any previous list changes are
+ undone.
+
+ Use this option to limit
+ exposure of processes to remote
+ systems, in particular via exotic
+ network protocols. Note that in most
+ cases the local
+ AF_UNIX address
+ family should be included in the
+ configured whitelist as it is
+ frequently used for local
+ communication, including for
+ syslog2
+ logging.
+
+
+
+ Personality=
+
+ Controls which
+ kernel architecture
+ uname2
+ shall report, when invoked by unit
+ processes. Takes one of
+ x86 and
+ x86-64. This is
+ useful when running 32-bit services on
+ a 64-bit host system. If not specified
+ the personality is left unmodified and
+ thus reflects the personality of the
+ host system's
+ kernel.
+
+
+
+ RuntimeDirectory=
+ RuntimeDirectoryMode=
+
+ Takes a list of
+ directory names. If set one or more
+ directories by the specified names
+ will be created below
+ /run (for system
+ services) or below
+ $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
+ (for user services) when the unit is
+ started and removed when the unit is
+ stopped. The directories will have the
+ access mode specified in
+ RuntimeDirectoryMode=,
+ and will be owned by the user and
+ group specified in
+ User= and
+ Group=. Use this to
+ manage one or more runtime directories
+ of the unit and bind their lifetime to
+ the daemon runtime. The specified
+ directory names must be relative, and
+ may not include a
+ /, i.e. must refer
+ to simple directories to create or
+ remove. This is particularly useful
+ for unpriviliges daemons that cannot
+ create runtime directories in
+ /run due to lack
+ of privileges, and to make sure the
+ runtime directory is cleaned up
+ automatically after use. For runtime
+ directories that require more complex
+ or different configuration or lifetime
+ guarantees, please consider using
+ tmpfiles.d5.
@@ -1205,6 +1370,17 @@
tty.
+
+ $MAINPID
+
+ The PID of the units
+ main process if it is known. This is
+ only set for control processes as
+ invoked by
+ ExecReload= and
+ similar.
+
+
$MANAGERPID
@@ -1251,7 +1427,7 @@
systemd.setenv= (see
systemd1). Additional
variables may also be set through PAM,
- c.f. pam_env8.
+ cf. pam_env8.
@@ -1268,6 +1444,7 @@
systemd.kill5,
systemd.resource-control5,
systemd.directives7,
+ tmpfiles.d5,
exec3