Carlos E. R. wrote:
Then I would suggest you start reading the man pages, especially systemd, systemctl and systemd.service.
Sure, I do, but that doesn't mean I understand it all. Systemd is too vast, there are many relationships.
Well, you just pick a place to start :-)
Man pages are usually a list of options to consult by somebody that already knows the relations, not an explanation on how things work and how to adapt or use.
systemd is probably one of the best documented softwares out there. man pages are manual pages, they are mostly for reference, when you can't remember that stupid incantation. Having said that, the systemd man pages are excellent too - systemd.service and systemd.unit, for instance. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (5.5°C) Member, openSUSE Heroes (2016 - present) We're hiring - https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Heroes