Systemd-239
Introduction to systemd
While systemd was installed when
building LFS, there are many features provided by the package that
were not included in the initial installation because Linux-PAM was not yet installed. The
systemd package needs to be
rebuilt to provide a working systemd-logind service, which
provides many additional features for dependent packages.
This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-8.3
platform.
Package Information
Additional Downloads
systemd Dependencies
Required
Linux-PAM-1.3.0
Recommended Runtime Dependencies
Polkit-0.114
Optional
make-ca-0.8, cURL-7.61.0,
git-2.18.0,
GnuTLS-3.5.19, Iptables-1.8.0, libgcrypt-1.8.3,
libidn2-2.0.5, libseccomp-2.3.3,
libxkbcommon-0.8.2, qemu-3.0.0, Valgrind-3.13.0, zsh-5.5.1 (for the zsh
completions), cryptsetup,
gnu-efi, kexec-tools,
libmicrohttpd,
lz4,
qrencode, quota-tools
and Sphinx
Optional (to rebuild the manual pages)
docbook-xml-4.5, docbook-xsl-1.79.2, and libxslt-1.1.32
User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/systemd
Installation of systemd
First, apply a fix for glibc-2.28:
patch -Np1 -i ../systemd-239-glibc_statx_fix-1.patch
Remove an unneeded group, render
,
from the default udev rules:
sed -i 's/GROUP="render", //' rules/50-udev-default.rules.in
Rebuild systemd by running the
following commands:
mkdir build &&
cd build &&
meson --prefix=/usr \
--sysconfdir=/etc \
--localstatedir=/var \
-Dblkid=true \
-Dbuildtype=release \
-Ddefault-dnssec=no \
-Dfirstboot=false \
-Dinstall-tests=false \
-Dldconfig=false \
-Drootprefix= \
-Drootlibdir=/lib \
-Dsplit-usr=true \
-Dsysusers=false \
-Db_lto=false \
.. &&
ninja
Note
For the best test results, make sure you run the testsuite from a
system that is booted by the same systemd version you are rebuilding.
To test the results, issue: ninja
test.
Warning
Installing the package will overwrite all files installed by
systemd in LFS. It is critical
that nothing uses either systemd
or Udev libraries during the
installation. The best way to ensure that these libraries are not
being used is to run the installation in rescue mode. To switch
to rescue mode, run the following command as the root
user (from a TTY):
systemctl start rescue.target
Now, as the root
user:
ninja install
If RPM is not installed, remove an
unnecessary directory by running the following command as the
root
user:
rm -rfv /usr/lib/rpm
Configuring systemd
The /etc/pam.d/system-session
file
needs to be modified and a new file needs to be created in order
for systemd-logind to
work correctly. Run the following commands as the root
user:
cat >> /etc/pam.d/system-session << "EOF"
# Begin Systemd addition
session required pam_loginuid.so
session optional pam_systemd.so
# End Systemd addition
EOF
cat > /etc/pam.d/systemd-user << "EOF"
# Begin /etc/pam.d/systemd-user
account required pam_access.so
account include system-account
session required pam_env.so
session required pam_limits.so
session include system-session
auth required pam_deny.so
password required pam_deny.so
# End /etc/pam.d/systemd-user
EOF
At this point, you should reload the systemd daemon, and reenter
multi-user mode with the following commands (as the root
user):
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl start multi-user.target
Warning
If upgrading from a previous version of systemd and an initrd is
used for system boot, you should generate a new initrd before
rebooting the system.
Contents
A list of the installed files, along with their short descriptions
can be found at ../../../../lfs/view/8.3/chapter06/systemd.html#contents-systemd.
Listed below are the newly installed libraries and directories
along with short descriptions.
Installed Programs:
None
Installed Libraries:
pam_systemd.so (in /lib/security
)
Installed Directories:
None
Short Descriptions
pam_systemd.so
|
is a PAM module used to register user sessions with the
systemd login manager,
systemd-logind.
|
Last updated on 2018-08-14 19:39:38 -0700