i create a target file to group all my personal services in my fedora 18, i tested the services and i can start then individually, but if i try to enable the target i got a error message!

[root@ghostrider system]# systemctl enable developer.target
Failed to issue method call: Invalid argument

And here the target code:

###########################################################################
# Target para ativar servicos de desenvolvimento em Java
###########################################################################
#/etc/systemd/system/developer.target

[Unit]
Description=Processes Java
After=default.target

[Install]
Alias=developer.target

I really don't understand what that message means, any clues?

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1  
You cannot use [section] inside a script comment those to line [] as a meaining in shell. As a consequence the call to the shell function [] have incorrect argument. – Kiwy Dec 6 '13 at 13:37
1  
Hey i found why the first error, all service, target and unit files must be in /usr/lib/systemd/system then the target can be enabled, systemctl will create a symlink in /etc/systemd/system. If the after the services must be enabled also, after systemctl will create the .wants directory in both location /etc/systemd/system and /usr/lib/systemd/system and create the symlinks for every service. But i still having problems with the pid file. – LottaLava Dec 7 '13 at 0:14
1  
Unit files do not have to be placed in /usr/lib/systemd/system/. See the section Unit Load Path of man 5 systemd.unit for valid locations, where among others /etc/systemd/system/ is included. – Anton Eliasson Jan 24 '16 at 17:21

You have an Alias with the same name as the unit (developer.target). This caused the same issue for me while writing a service file. It is completely redundant, so just remove it.

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systemd will create symlink in /etc/systemd/system/xxx.target.wants, if your /etc/systemd/system/xxx.target.wants/xxx.service is not a symlink, systemd can not create symlink, it will throw this error.

please clean your /etc/systemd/system/xxx.target.wants/ dir.

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