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Linux Service Management Made Easy with systemd

You're reading from   Linux Service Management Made Easy with systemd Advanced techniques to effectively manage, control, and monitor Linux systems and services

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801811644
Length 420 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Donald A. Tevault Donald A. Tevault
Author Profile Icon Donald A. Tevault
Donald A. Tevault
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Using systemd
2. Chapter 1: Understanding the Need for systemd FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding systemd Directories and Files 4. Chapter 3: Understanding Service, Path, and Socket Units 5. Chapter 4: Controlling systemd Services 6. Chapter 5: Creating and Editing Services 7. Chapter 6: Understanding systemd Targets 8. Chapter 7: Understanding systemd Timers 9. Chapter 8: Understanding the systemd Boot Process 10. Chapter 9: Setting System Parameters 11. Chapter 10: Understanding Shutdown and Reboot Commands 12. Section 2: Understanding cgroups
13. Chapter 11: Understanding cgroups Version 1 14. Chapter 12: Controlling Resource Usage with cgroups Version 1 15. Chapter 13: Understanding cgroup Version 2 16. Section 3: Logging, Timekeeping, Networking, and Booting
17. Chapter 14: Using journald 18. Chapter 15: Using systemd-networkd and systemd-resolved 19. Chapter 16: Understanding Timekeeping with systemd 20. Chapter 17: Understanding systemd and Bootloaders 21. Chapter 18: Understanding systemd-logind 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding the history of cgroups

This might shock you, but the cgroups technology didn't start as a part of systemd, and it wasn't invented by Red Hat. It's actually a component in the Linux kernel that can run on non-systemd Linux distros. A pair of Google engineers started cgroups development back in 2006, four years before Red Hat engineers started developing systemd. The first enterprise-grade Linux distro to include cgroups technology was Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6, which ran a hybrid upstart/SysV setup instead of systemd. Using cgroups on RHEL 6 was optional, and you had to jump through some hoops to set them up.

Nowadays, cgroups are enabled by default on all of the major enterprise-type Linux distros and are tightly integrated with systemd. RHEL 7 was the first enterprise distro to use systemd and was also the first enterprise distro to always have cgroups enabled.

There are currently two versions of the cgroups technology. Version 1 works well for...

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