systemd-activate systemd Developer Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek zbyszek@in.waw.pl systemd-activate 8 systemd-activate Test socket activation of daemons /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-activate OPTIONS daemon OPTIONS Description systemd-activate can be used to launch a socket activated daemon from the command-line for testing purposes. It can also be used to launch single instances of the daemon per connection (inetd-style). The daemon to launch and its options should be specifed after options intended for systemd-activate. If the option is given, file descriptor of the connection will be used as the standard input and output of the launched process. Otherwise, standard input and output will be inherited, and sockets will be passed through file descriptors 3 and higher. Sockets passed through $LISTEN_FDS to systemd-activate will be passed through to the dameon, in the original positions. Other sockets specified with will use consecutive descriptors. Options Listen on this address. Takes a string like 2000 or 127.0.0.1:2001. Launch a separate instance of daemon per connection and pass the connection socket as standard input and standard output. Add this variable to the environment of the launched process. If VAR is followed by =, assume that it is a variable–value pair. Otherwise, obtain the value from the environment of systemd-activate itself. Environment variables $LISTEN_FDS $LISTEN_PID See sd_listen_fds3. $SYSTEMD_LOG_TARGET $SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL $SYSTEMD_LOG_COLOR $SYSTEMD_LOG_LOCATION Same as in systemd1. Example 1 $ /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-activate -l 2000 -a cat This runs an echo server on port 2000. Example 2 $ /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-activate -l 19531 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-journal-gatewayd This runs a socket activated instance of systemd-journal-gatewayd8. See Also systemd1, systemd.socket5, systemd.service5, cat1