I've switched to systemd, in a core-image-base build for an Atom (Cedartrail), and it boots fine. Now I want to make my own daemon start up. I'm new to systemd, and the way it seems to be set up is different from the way the systemd docs say it is usually set up.
The docs say that systemd, when booting up, usually activates a target called default.target, which is symlinked to either multi-user.target or graphical.target. (It would be the former in this GUI-less system.) Then, if I want to cause my daemon to be started, I would add a symlink to its systemd unit file to the .wants directory associated with multi-user.target. But I can't find these things. They're not in the trees under /etc/systemd or /run/systemd. Oh, and when I do "systemctl list-unit-files", it shows both default.target and multi-user.target as disabled. What makes this difficult to figure out is that the tools I have for perusing the target system are so primitive. There's no editor in the target that I'm aware of, and I can't network into the system and use an external editor to examine various files. So my question is this: is there someplace in build/tmp on my build system where the full target file system exists as a directory tree, so that I can pore through it and see how systemd is really configured? Or perhaps someone can just tell me what target gets activated on bootup, where its .wants directory is, and what directory I should put my daemon's unit file into. -- Ciao, Paul D. DeRocco Paul mailto:pdero...@ix.netcom.com _______________________________________________ yocto mailing list yocto@yoctoproject.org https://lists.yoctoproject.org/listinfo/yocto