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ohmyzsh/plugins/systemd/README.md
Sir Mobus Gochfulshigan Dorphin Esquire XXIII eeb49bf5b0
systemd: add prompt function to show systemd units' status (#7657)
Co-authored-by: Marc Cornellà <marc.cornella@live.com>
2020-02-18 23:04:14 +01:00

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# Systemd plugin
The systemd plugin provides many useful aliases for systemd.
To use it, add systemd to the plugins array of your zshrc file:
```
plugins=(... systemd)
```
## Aliases
| Alias | Command | Description |
|:-----------------------|:-----------------------------------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| `sc-list-units` | `systemctl list-units` | List all units systemd has in memory |
| `sc-is-active` | `systemctl is-active` | Show whether a unit is active |
| `sc-status` | `systemctl status` | Show terse runtime status information about one or more units |
| `sc-show` | `systemctl show` | Show properties of units, jobs, or the manager itself |
| `sc-help` | `systemctl help` | Show man page of units |
| `sc-list-unit-files` | `systemctl list-unit-files` | List unit files installed on the system |
| `sc-is-enabled` | `systemctl is-enabled` | Checks whether any of the specified unit files are enabled |
| `sc-list-jobs` | `systemctl list-jobs` | List jobs that are in progress |
| `sc-show-environment` | `systemctl show-environment` | Dump the systemd manager environment block |
| `sc-cat` | `systemctl cat` | Show backing files of one or more units |
| `sc-list-timers` | `systemctl list-timers` | List timer units currently in memory |
| **Aliases with sudo** |
| `sc-start` | `sudo systemctl start` | Start Unit(s) |
| `sc-stop` | `sudo systemctl stop` | Stop Unit(s) |
| `sc-reload` | `sudo systemctl reload` | Reload Unit(s) |
| `sc-restart` | `sudo systemctl restart` | Restart Unit(s) |
| `sc-try-restart` | `sudo systemctl try-restart` | Restart Unit(s) |
| `sc-isolate` | `sudo systemctl isolate` | Start a unit and its dependencies and stop all others |
| `sc-kill` | `sudo systemctl kill` | Kill unit(s) |
| `sc-reset-failed` | `sudo systemctl reset-failed` | Reset the "failed" state of the specified units, |
| `sc-enable` | `sudo systemctl enable` | Enable unit(s) |
| `sc-disable` | `sudo systemctl disable` | Disable unit(s) |
| `sc-reenable` | `sudo systemctl reenable` | Reenable unit(s) |
| `sc-preset` | `sudo systemctl preset` | Reset the enable/disable status one or more unit files |
| `sc-mask` | `sudo systemctl mask` | Mask unit(s) |
| `sc-unmask` | `sudo systemctl unmask` | Unmask unit(s) |
| `sc-link` | `sudo systemctl link` | Link a unit file into the unit file search path |
| `sc-load` | `sudo systemctl load` | Load unit(s) |
| `sc-cancel` | `sudo systemctl cancel` | Cancel job(s) |
| `sc-set-environment` | `sudo systemctl set-environment` | Set one or more systemd manager environment variables |
| `sc-unset-environment` | `sudo systemctl unset-environment` | Unset one or more systemd manager environment variables |
| `sc-edit` | `sudo systemctl edit` | Edit a drop-in snippet or a whole replacement file with `--full` |
| `sc-enable-now` | `sudo systemctl enable --now` | Enable and start unit(s) |
| `sc-disable-now` | `sudo systemctl disable --now` | Disable and stop unit(s) |
| `sc-mask-now` | `sudo systemctl mask --now` | Mask and stop unit(s) |
### User aliases
You can use the above aliases as `--user` by using the prefix `scu` instead of `sc`.
For example: `scu-list-units` will be aliased to `systemctl --user list-units`.
### Unit Status Prompt
You can add a token to your prompt in a similar way to the gitfast plugin. To add the token
to your prompt, drop `$(systemd_prompt_info [unit]...)` into your prompt (more than one unit
may be specified).
The plugin will add the following to your prompt for each `$unit`.
```
<prefix><unit>:<active|notactive><suffix>
```
You can control these parts with the following variables:
- `<prefix>`: Set `$ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_PREFIX`.
- `<suffix>`: Set `$ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_SUFFIX`.
- `<unit>`: name passed as parameter to the function. If you want it to be in ALL CAPS,
you can set the variable `$ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_CAPS` to a non-empty string.
- `<active>`: shown if the systemd unit is active.
Set `$ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_ACTIVE`.
- `<notactive>`: shown if the systemd unit is *not* active.
Set `$ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_NOTACTIVE`.
For example, if your prompt contains `PROMPT='$(systemd_prompt_info dhcpd httpd)'` and you set the following variables:
```
ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_PREFIX="["
ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_SUFFIX="]"
ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_ACTIVE="+"
ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_NOTACTIVE="X"
ZSH_THEME_SYSTEMD_PROMPT_CAPS=1
```
If `dhcpd` is running, and `httpd` is not, then your prompt will look like this:
```
[DHCPD: +][HTTPD: X]
```