[#creating-new-systemd-services] = Creating new systemd services This example shows how to create a unit file for a custom service. Custom unit files are located in `/etc/systemd/system/` and have a `.service` extension. For example, a custom `foo` service uses `/etc/systemd/system/foo.service` unit file. [discrete] == Prerequisites * You are logged in as a user with administrator-level permissions. [discrete] == Procedure This procedure creates a basic configuration file to control the `foo` service. . Create and edit the new configuration file: + ---- # vi /etc/systemd/system/foo.service ---- . The next few steps describe each section its parameters to add to the file: .. The `[Unit]` section provides basic information about the service. The `foo` service uses the following parameters: + `Description`:: A string describing the unit. systemd displays this description next to the unit name in the user interface. `Requires`:: Defines unit to use as a dependency for the service. If you activate the unit, systemd activates the units listed in `Requires` as well. For example, the `foo` service might require network connectivity, which means the `foo` services requires `network.target` as a dependency. + The resulting `[Unit]` section looks like this: + ---- [Unit] Description=My custom service Requires=network.target ---- .. The `[Service]` section provides instructions on how to control the service. The `foo` service uses the following parameters: + `Type`:: Defines the type of systemd service. In this example, the `foo` service is a `simple` service, which starts the service without any special consideration. `ExecStart`:: The command to run to start the service. This includes the full path to the command and arguments to modify the service. + The resulting `[Service]` section looks like this: + ---- [Service] Type=simple ExecStart=/usr/bin/sleep infinity ---- .. The `[Install]` section provides instructions on how systemd installs the service. The `foo` service uses the following parameters: + `WantedBy`:: Defines which service triggers the custom service if enabled with `systemctl enable`. This is mostly used for starting the custom service on boot. In this example, `foo.service` uses `multi-user.target`, which starts `foo.service` when systemd loads `multi-user.target` on boot. . The full `foo.service` file contains the following contents: + ---- [Unit] Description=My custom service Requires=network.target [Service] Type=simple ExecStart=/usr/bin/sleep infinity [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ---- + Save the file. . Start the custom `foo` service: + ---- # systemctl start foo ---- . Check the status of the service to ensure the service is running: + ---- $ systemctl status foo ● foo.service - My custom service Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/foo.service; static; vendor preset: disabled) Active: active (running) since Thu 2017-12-14 14:09:12 AEST; 6s ago Main PID: 31837 (sleep) Tasks: 1 (limit: 4915) CGroup: /system.slice/foo.service └─31837 /usr/bin/sleep infinity Dec 14 14:09:12 dansmachine systemd[1]: Started My custom service. ---- [discrete] == Related Information * See link:#common-service-parameters[Common service parameters] for more information about the parameters used in this procedure.