On Fri, May 11, 2018 at 7:55 AM, Tom Horsley <horsley1...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I installed the grive2 package so I could manually,
> when I need to upload a file to google drive via
> a command line tool. It works (clumsily) for this.
>
> But the package also installs a bunch of systemd user
> services and timers that unsuccessfully try to
> sync some nonexistant directory every half hour,
> filling the log with fantastic numbers of errors.
>
> I tried to do systemctl disable --user commands
> on these things to make them go away, but it
> had no effect.
>
> I did a "find" to discover all the places cluttered
> with these grive units and came up with this big
> hammer to eradicate them:
>
> rm -rf /usr/lib/systemd/user/grive-changes@.service \
>    /usr/lib/systemd/user/grive-timer@.service \
>    /usr/lib/systemd/user/grive-timer@.timer \
>    /etc/systemd/user/timers.target.wants/grive-timer@.timer \
>    /etc/systemd/user/default.target.wants/grive-changes@.service
>
> But even after doing that the damn log messages keep
> appearing as though systemd has them squirrelled away
> somewhere and refuses to relinquish them. (I'll soon
> learn if rebooting after that manages to work).
>
> So I have to ask, is there some "official" way to make
> systemd user services go away and stop bothering me?

Were some user services installed in $HOME?

Do they show up with "systemctl --user"?
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