Thank you for your reply. The issue is, I do not know what other services/targets will need to be started prior to BIND starting. In other words, I have no idea how to set up the unit file for BIND.
Thanks On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 12:09 PM, Anand Buddhdev <ana...@ripe.net> wrote: > On 25/04/16 17:59, Sean Son wrote: > > Hi Sean Son, > > > I know I emailed the list about compiling BIND on a SystemD distro > earlier > > last month. This time I have a different question. After I compile BIND9 > on > > CentOS 7 , how do I get it to start up at boot time and how do I restart > > it? I don't want to have to write a systemd unit configuration file for > it. > > I want it to run using a boot script or some other way that will allow > BIND > > to start up at boot and also allow the system administrator to restart > BIND > > if it ever stops running. > > A systemd unit file is the *easiest* and *simplest* way to get BIND to > start at boot. Is there any reason you don't want to use systemd? It's > not difficult at all. You just a few lines in a file to create a system > unit. > > If you don't want systemd to restart BIND if it crashes, then you can > just set: > > Restart=no > > Then, you can start BIND by hand with "systemctl start <unitname>". > > Regards, > Anand >
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