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-rw-r--r--man/systemd.preset.xml75
1 files changed, 53 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/man/systemd.preset.xml b/man/systemd.preset.xml
index 5697e50be7..cbd89daf16 100644
--- a/man/systemd.preset.xml
+++ b/man/systemd.preset.xml
@@ -32,28 +32,20 @@
<refsect1>
<title>Description</title>
- <para>Preset files may be used to encode policy which units shall
- be enabled by default and which ones shall be disabled. They are
- read by <command>systemctl preset</command> (for more information
- see
- <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>)
- which uses this information to enable or disable a unit according
- to preset policy. <command>systemctl preset</command> is used by
- the post install scriptlets of RPM packages (or other OS package
- formats), to enable/disable specific units by default on package
- installation, enforcing distribution, spin or administrator preset
- policy. This allows choosing a certain set of units to be
- enabled/disabled even before installing the actual package.</para>
-
- <para>For more information on the preset logic please have a look
- at the <ulink
- url="https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/Preset">Presets</ulink>
- document.</para>
-
- <para>It is not recommended to ship preset files within the
- respective software packages implementing the units, but rather
- centralize them in a distribution or spin default policy, which
- can be amended by administrator policy.</para>
+ <para>Preset files may be used to encode policy which units shall be enabled by default and which ones
+ shall be disabled. They are read by <command>systemctl preset</command> which uses this information to
+ enable or disable a unit. Depending on that policy, <command>systemctl preset</command> is identical to
+ <command>systemctl enable</command> or <command>systemctl disable</command>.
+
+ <command>systemctl preset</command> is used by the post install scriptlets of rpm packages (or other OS
+ package formats), to enable/disable specific units by default on package installation, enforcing
+ distribution, spin or administrator preset policy. This allows choosing a certain set of units to be
+ enabled/disabled even before installing the actual package. For more information, see
+ <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
+
+ <para>It is not recommended to ship preset files within the respective software packages implementing the
+ units, but rather centralize them in a distribution or spin default policy, which can be amended by
+ administrator policy, see below.</para>
<para>If no preset files exist, <command>systemctl
preset</command> will enable all units that are installed by
@@ -176,12 +168,51 @@ disable *</programlisting>
</refsect1>
<refsect1>
+ <title>Motiviation for the preset logic</title>
+
+ <para>Different distributions have different policies on which services shall be enabled by default when
+ the package they are shipped in is installed. On Fedora all services stay off by default, so that
+ installing a package will not cause a service to be enabled (with some exceptions). On Debian all
+ services are immediately enabled by default, so that installing a package will cause its services to be
+ enabled right-away.</para>
+
+ <para>Even within a single distribution, different spins (flavours, remixes, whatever you might want to
+ call them) of a distribution also have different policies on what services to enable, and what services
+ to leave off. For example, Fedora Workstation will enable <command>gdm</command> as display manager by
+ default, while the Fedora KDE spin will enable <command>sddm</command> instead.</para>
+
+ <para>Different sites might also have different policies what to turn on by default and what to turn
+ off. For example, one administrator would prefer to enforce the policy of "<command>sshd</command> should
+ be always on, but everything else off", while another one might say "<command>snmpd</command> always on,
+ and for everything else use the distribution policy defaults".</para>
+
+ <para>Traditionally, policy about which services shall be enabled were implemented in each package
+ individually. This made it cumbersome to implement different policies per spin or per site, or to create
+ software packages that do the right thing on more than one distribution. The enablement mechanism was
+ also encoding the enablement policy.</para>
+
+ <para>The preset mechanism allows clean separation of the enablement mechanism (inside the package
+ scriptlets, by invoking <command>systemctl preset</command>) and enablement policy (centralized in the
+ preset files), and lifts the configuration out of individual packages. Preset files may be written for
+ specific distributions, for specific spins or for specific sites, in order to enforce different policies
+ as needed. It is recommended to apply the policy encoded in preset files in package installation
+ scriptlets.</para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
<title>See Also</title>
<para>
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-delta</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
</para>
+
+ <para><citerefentry><refentrytitle>daemon</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
+ has a discussion of packaging scriptlets.</para>
+
+ <para>Fedora page introducing the use of presets:
+ <ulink url="https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/PackagePresets">Features/PackagePresets</ulink>.
+ </para>
</refsect1>
</refentry>