Fedora 23
Sponsored Link

Services2015/11/03

[1] It's possible to display services' status like follows.
# the list of services which are active

[root@dlp ~]#
systemctl -t service

UNIT                          LOAD   ACTIVE SUB     DESCRIPTION
abrt-ccpp.service             loaded active exited  Install ABRT coredump hook
abrt-oops.service             loaded active running ABRT kernel log watcher
abrtd.service                 loaded active running ABRT Automated Bug Reporting Tool
atd.service                   loaded active running Job spooling tools
auditd.service                loaded active running Security Auditing Service
blk-availability.service      loaded active exited  Availability of block devices
chronyd.service               loaded active running NTP client/server
crond.service                 loaded active running Command Scheduler
dbus.service                  loaded active running D-Bus System Message Bus
dracut-shutdown.service       loaded active exited  Restore /run/initramfs on shutdown
fedora-import-state.service   loaded active exited  Import network configuration from initramfs
fedora-readonly.service       loaded active exited  Configure read-only root support
firewalld.service             loaded active running firewalld - dynamic firewall daemon
getty@tty1.service            loaded active running Getty on tty1
gssproxy.service              loaded active running GSSAPI Proxy Daemon
irqbalance.service            loaded active running irqbalance daemon
.....
.....

# the list of all services

[root@dlp ~]#
systemctl list-unit-files -t service

UNIT FILE                     STATE
abrt-ccpp.service             enabled
abrt-journal-core.service     disabled
abrt-oops.service             enabled
abrt-pstoreoops.service       disabled
abrt-vmcore.service           enabled
abrt-xorg.service             enabled
abrtd.service                 enabled
arp-ethers.service            disabled
atd.service                   enabled
auditd.service                enabled
auth-rpcgss-module.service    static
autofs.service                disabled
autovt@.service               disabled
.....
.....
[2] Stop and turn OFF auto-start setting for a service if you don'd need it. (it's smartd as an example below)
[root@dlp ~]#
systemctl stop smartd

[root@dlp ~]#
systemctl disable smartd

[3] There are some SysV services yet. Those are controled by chkconfig like follows.
[root@dlp ~]#
chkconfig --list


Note: This output shows SysV services only and does not include native
      systemd services. SysV configuration data might be overridden by native
      systemd configuration.

      If you want to list systemd services use 'systemctl list-unit-files'.
      To see services enabled on particular target use
      'systemctl list-dependencies [target]'.

netconsole      0:off   1:off   2:off   3:off   4:off   5:off   6:off
network         0:off   1:off   2:off   3:off   4:off   5:off   6:off

# for exmaple, turn OFF auto-start setting for netconsole

[root@dlp ~]#
chkconfig netconsole off

Matched Content