This module declares exec resources to create global sync points for reloading systemd.
Version 2 and newer of the module don't work with Hiera 3! You need to migrate your existing Hiera setup to Hiera 5
There are two ways to use this module.
Let this module handle file creation and systemd reloading.
systemd::unit_file { 'foo.service':
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.service",
}
~> service {'foo':
ensure => 'running',
}
Or handle file creation yourself and trigger systemd.
include systemd::systemctl::daemon_reload
file { '/usr/lib/systemd/system/foo.service':
ensure => file,
owner => 'root',
group => 'root',
mode => '0644',
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.service",
}
~> Class['systemd::systemctl::daemon_reload']
service {'foo':
ensure => 'running',
subscribe => File['/usr/lib/systemd/system/foo.service'],
}
You can also use this module to more fully manage the new unit. This example deploys the unit, reloads systemd and then enables and starts it.
systemd::unit_file { 'foo.service':
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.service",
enable => true,
active => true,
}
Drop-in files are used to add or alter settings of a unit without modifying the unit itself. As for the unit files, the module can handle the file and directory creation and systemd reloading:
systemd::dropin_file { 'foo.conf':
unit => 'foo.service',
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.conf",
}
~> service {'foo':
ensure => 'running',
}
Or handle file and directory creation yourself and trigger systemd:
include systemd::systemctl::daemon_reload
file { '/etc/systemd/system/foo.service.d':
ensure => directory,
owner => 'root',
group => 'root',
}
file { '/etc/systemd/system/foo.service.d/foo.conf':
ensure => file,
owner => 'root',
group => 'root',
mode => '0644',
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.conf",
}
~> Class['systemd::systemctl::daemon_reload']
service {'foo':
ensure => 'running',
subscribe => File['/etc/systemd/system/foo.service.d/foo.conf'],
}
Let this module handle file creation and systemd reloading
systemd::tmpfile { 'foo.conf':
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.conf",
}
Or handle file creation yourself and trigger systemd.
include systemd::tmpfiles
file { '/etc/tmpfiles.d/foo.conf':
ensure => file,
owner => 'root',
group => 'root',
mode => '0644',
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.conf",
}
~> Class['systemd::tmpfiles']
Manage soft and hard limits on various resources for executed processes.
systemd::service_limits { 'foo.service':
limits => {
'LimitNOFILE' => 8192,
'LimitNPROC' => 16384,
}
}
Or provide the configuration file yourself. Systemd reloading and restarting of the service are handled by the module.
systemd::service_limits { 'foo.service':
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/foo.conf",
}
systemd-networkd is able to manage your network configuration. We provide a defined resource which can write the interface configurations. systemd-networkd needs to be restarted to apply the configs. The defined resource can do this for you:
systemd::network{'eth0.network':
source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/eth0.network",
restart_service => true,
}
Systemd provides multiple services. Currently you can manage systemd-resolved
,
systemd-timesyncd
and systemd-networkd
via the main class:
class{'systemd':
manage_resolved => true,
manage_networkd => true,
manage_timesyncd => true,
}
$manage_networkd is required if you want to reload it for new
systemd::network
resources. Setting $manage_resolved will also manage your
/etc/resolv.conf
.
When configuring systemd::resolved
you could set dns_stub_resolver
to false (default) to use a standard /etc/resolved.conf
, or you could set it to true
to use the local resolver provided by systemd-resolved
.
Systemd has introduced DNS Over TLS
in the release 239. Currently two states are supported no
and opportunistic
. When enabled with opportunistic
systemd-resolved
will start a TCP-session to a DNS server with DNS Over TLS
support. Note that there will be no host checking for DNS Over TLS
due to missing implementation in systemd-resolved
.
It is possible to configure the default ntp servers in /etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf:
class{'systemd':
manage_timesyncd => true,
ntp_server => ['0.pool.ntp.org', '1.pool.ntp.org'],
fallback_ntp_server => ['2.pool.ntp.org', '3.pool.ntp.org'],
}
This requires puppetlabs-inifile, which is only a soft dependency in this module (you need to explicitly install it). Both parameters accept a string or an array.
Systemd has support for different accounting option. It can track
CPU/Memory/Network stats per process. This is explained in depth at systemd-system.conf.
This defaults to off (default on most operating systems). You can enable this
with the $manage_accounting
parameter. The module provides a default set of
working accounting options per operating system, but you can still modify them
with $accounting
:
class{'systemd':
manage_accounting => true,
accounting => {
'DefaultCPUAccounting' => 'yes',
'DefaultMemoryAccounting' => 'no',
}
}
It also allows you to manage journald settings. You can manage journald settings through setting the journald_settings
parameter. If you want a parameter to be removed, you can pass its value as params.
systemd::journald_settings:
Storage: auto
MaxRetentionSec: 5day
MaxLevelStore:
ensure: absent