There are a few ways to do this:
Edit autofs.service
By design, service files should be site-maintainable. On Debian-based platforms, vendor-supplied service files are in /lib/systemd/system/
, I think redhat has them in /usr/lib/systemd/system/
but you can override these with site-managed service files in /etc/systemd/system/
.
In that case, I'd
cp /lib/systemd/system/autofs.service /etc/systemd/system/autofs.service
Then in the [Service]
section, I'd add:
ExecStartPre=/backup/sw/bmount before
ExecStartPost=/backup/sw/bmount after
The systemd.service
manpage says:
ExecStart= commands are only run after all ExecStartPre= commands exit successfully.
ExecStartPost= commands are only run after the commands specified in ExecStart= have been invoked successfully, as determined by Type= (i.e. the process has been started for Type=simple or Type=idle, the last ExecStart= process exited successfully for Type=oneshot, ...).
Drop-in service parameters
A more elegant way to do the same thing as what's above is to use a drop-in. Simply create /etc/systemd/system/autofs.service.d/backup.conf
with this content:
[Service]
ExecStartPre=/backup/sw/bmount before
ExecStartPost=/backup/sw/bmount after
Relationships
Maybe autofs.service
already has ExecStartPre
and ExecStartPost
commands and you are worried about interferring with that service. In that case, you can use relationships to start/stop your services.
[Unit]
Description=Backup mount
PartOf=autofs.service
Before=autofs.service
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/backup/sw/bmount before
[Install]
WantedBy=autofs.service
and
[Unit]
Description=Backup mount
PartOf=autofs.service
After=autofs.service
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/backup/sw/bmount after
[Install]
WantedBy=autofs.service
In this case:
PartOf=autofs.service
means "When systemd stops or restarts autofs.service
, the action is propagated to backup.service
"
Before=autofs.service
means "If both units are being started, autofs.service
's startup is delayed until backup.service
has finished starting up."
After=autofs.service
means "If both units are being started, backup.service
's startup is delayed until autofs.service
has finished starting up."
WantedBy=autofs.service
means "backup.service
will be started if autofs.service
is".
Type=oneshot
means that the service will still be considered as running, even after the ExecStart=
process completes.
Be sure to run systemctl daemon-reload
so systemd reads the new service. Also run systemctl enable backup.service
to ensure that the WantedBy=
becomes a Wants=
for autofs.service
.
I think you were pretty close with your solution.