systemd's [ok] and [fail] at the beginning of the line












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I have got to re-write heaps of boot scripts for a variety of servers of mine because of upgrading from CentOS 6.X (SysVinit) to CentOS 7.X (systemd).



There is a file "/etc/rc.d/init.d/function" that contains a number of functions that handle the printout for "[ok]" and "[fail]". There are called "echo_success" and "echo_failure". They are still part of the latest version (compatibility) but they print the [OK] and [fail] at COL 60, not at COL 0.



All other boot up scripts/daemons show the [OK] and [FAIL] at the beginning and then the [UNIT] Description.



How do I achieve this using existing functions that are part of systemd?
Does systemd handle this and I just need to return "fail" and "ok"?
But how?



This is especially tricky if you use "ExecStart" and "ExecStop".
Do I just dump error info to the logs and not print anything but only return "success", "fail" and "warning"?



What are the values of "success", "fail" and "warning"?



thanks









share







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    I have got to re-write heaps of boot scripts for a variety of servers of mine because of upgrading from CentOS 6.X (SysVinit) to CentOS 7.X (systemd).



    There is a file "/etc/rc.d/init.d/function" that contains a number of functions that handle the printout for "[ok]" and "[fail]". There are called "echo_success" and "echo_failure". They are still part of the latest version (compatibility) but they print the [OK] and [fail] at COL 60, not at COL 0.



    All other boot up scripts/daemons show the [OK] and [FAIL] at the beginning and then the [UNIT] Description.



    How do I achieve this using existing functions that are part of systemd?
    Does systemd handle this and I just need to return "fail" and "ok"?
    But how?



    This is especially tricky if you use "ExecStart" and "ExecStop".
    Do I just dump error info to the logs and not print anything but only return "success", "fail" and "warning"?



    What are the values of "success", "fail" and "warning"?



    thanks









    share







    New contributor




    Jobst is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























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      I have got to re-write heaps of boot scripts for a variety of servers of mine because of upgrading from CentOS 6.X (SysVinit) to CentOS 7.X (systemd).



      There is a file "/etc/rc.d/init.d/function" that contains a number of functions that handle the printout for "[ok]" and "[fail]". There are called "echo_success" and "echo_failure". They are still part of the latest version (compatibility) but they print the [OK] and [fail] at COL 60, not at COL 0.



      All other boot up scripts/daemons show the [OK] and [FAIL] at the beginning and then the [UNIT] Description.



      How do I achieve this using existing functions that are part of systemd?
      Does systemd handle this and I just need to return "fail" and "ok"?
      But how?



      This is especially tricky if you use "ExecStart" and "ExecStop".
      Do I just dump error info to the logs and not print anything but only return "success", "fail" and "warning"?



      What are the values of "success", "fail" and "warning"?



      thanks









      share







      New contributor




      Jobst is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I have got to re-write heaps of boot scripts for a variety of servers of mine because of upgrading from CentOS 6.X (SysVinit) to CentOS 7.X (systemd).



      There is a file "/etc/rc.d/init.d/function" that contains a number of functions that handle the printout for "[ok]" and "[fail]". There are called "echo_success" and "echo_failure". They are still part of the latest version (compatibility) but they print the [OK] and [fail] at COL 60, not at COL 0.



      All other boot up scripts/daemons show the [OK] and [FAIL] at the beginning and then the [UNIT] Description.



      How do I achieve this using existing functions that are part of systemd?
      Does systemd handle this and I just need to return "fail" and "ok"?
      But how?



      This is especially tricky if you use "ExecStart" and "ExecStop".
      Do I just dump error info to the logs and not print anything but only return "success", "fail" and "warning"?



      What are the values of "success", "fail" and "warning"?



      thanks







      systemd





      share







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      Jobst is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      share



      share






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      asked 2 mins ago









      JobstJobst

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      Jobst is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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