[#converting-sysvinit-services] = Converting SysVinit services Older versions of Fedora use SysVinit scripts to manage services. This section provides some guidelines on how to convert a SysVinit script to a Systemd equivalent. .Prerequisites * You are logged in as a user with administrator-level permissions. * You have a custom SysVinit script to convert to a Systemd configuration. .Procedure . Identify the runlevels in your SysVinit script. This is usually defined with `chkconfig` directive in the commented section at the beginning of the script. For example, the following indicates the service is using runlevels 3, 4, and 5: + ---- # chkconfig: 235 20 80 ---- + Systemd uses targets instead of runlevels. Use the table in <<#converting-sysvinit-services>> to map the runlevels to targets. In this example, runlevels 2, 3, and 5 are all multi-user runlevels, so the Systemd service can use the following: + ---- [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ---- + If you enable the custom Systemd service to start at boot (`systemctl enable foo.service`), Systemd loads the service when loading the `multi-user.target` at boot time. . Identify the dependent services and targets. For example, if the custom service requires network connectivity, specify the `network.target` as a dependency: + ---- [Unit] Description=My custom service Requires=network.target ---- . Identify the command used to start the service in the SysVinit script and convert this to the Systemd equivalent. For example, the script might contain a `start` function in the following format: + [source,bash] ---- start() { echo "Starting My Custom Service..." /usr/bin/myservice -D } ---- + In this example, the `/usr/bin/myservice` command is the custom service command set to daemonize with the `-D` option. Set the `ExecStart` parameter to use this command: + ---- [Service] ExecStart=/usr/bin/myservice -D ---- . Check the SysVinit script to see if the service uses a special command to restart the service. For example, the script might contain a `reboot` function that reloads the service: + [source,bash] ---- reboot() { echo "Reloading My Custom Service..." /usr/bin/myservice reload } ---- + In this example, the `/usr/bin/myservice` command is the custom service command and reloads the service using the `reload` subcommand. Set the `ExecReload` parameter to use this command: + ---- [Service] ExecReload=/usr/bin/myservice reload ---- + Alternatively, you can omit `ExecReload` and use the default behavior, which kills the service and starts it again. . Check the SysVinit script to see if the service uses a special command to stop the service. For example, the script might contain a `stop` function that reloads the service: + [source,bash] ---- reboot() { echo "Stopping My Custom Service..." /usr/bin/myservice shutdown } ---- + In this example, the `/usr/bin/myservice` command is the custom service command and stop the service gracefully using the `shutdown` subcommand. Set the `ExecStop` parameter to use this command: + ---- [Service] ExecStop=/usr/bin/myservice shutdown ---- + Alternatively, you can omit `ExecStop` and use the default behavior, which kills the service. . Review the SysVinit script and identify any additional parameters or functions. Use Systemd parameters to replicate any identified SysVinit functions that might be relevant to your service. .Related Information * See link:#common-service-parameters[Common service parameters] for more information about the parameters used in this procedure.