I am using a systemd service which calls a process when it's been "started" (e.g. systemctl start test.service
). As per the design, the process stays for ever in a loop, we are able to see process existence using 'ps' command. We have also seen that the process is getting killed (as intended) for systemctl stop
command.
However our requirement is, we want to do some safe shutdown operations from within the process before it gets killed. But I am not sure how to detect a systemd stop operation from within the process.
Does a systemctl stop test.service
command send SIGKILL
or SIGTERM
signal to kill the process? How can I detect a systemctl stop
operation from within a process?