Go bindings to systemd. The project has several packages:
activation
- for writing and using socket activation from Godaemon
- for notifying systemd of service status changesdbus
- for starting/stopping/inspecting running services and unitsjournal
- for writing to systemd's logging service, journaldsdjournal
- for reading from journald by wrapping its C APIlogin1
- for integration with the systemd logind APImachine1
- for registering machines/containers with systemdunit
- for (de)serialization and comparison of unit files
An example HTTP server using socket activation can be quickly set up by following this README on a Linux machine running systemd:
https://github.com/coreos/go-systemd/tree/master/examples/activation/httpserver
The daemon
package is an implementation of the sd_notify protocol. It can be used to inform systemd of service start-up completion, watchdog events, and other status changes.
The dbus
package connects to the systemd D-Bus API and lets you start, stop and introspect systemd units. The API docs are here:
http://godoc.org/github.com/coreos/go-systemd/dbus
Create /etc/dbus-1/system-local.conf
that looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC
"-//freedesktop//DTD D-Bus Bus Configuration 1.0//EN"
"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd">
<busconfig>
<policy user="root">
<allow eavesdrop="true"/>
<allow eavesdrop="true" send_destination="*"/>
</policy>
</busconfig>
Using the pure-Go journal
package you can submit journal entries directly to systemd's journal, taking advantage of features like indexed key/value pairs for each log entry.
The sdjournal
package provides read access to the journal by wrapping around journald's native C API; consequently it requires cgo and the journal headers to be available.
The login1
package provides functions to integrate with the systemd logind API.
The machine1
package allows interaction with the systemd machined D-Bus API.
The unit
package provides various functions for working with systemd unit files.