Index · Directives systemd 254

Name

systemd.system-credentials — System Credentials

Description

System and Service Credentials are data objects that may be passed into booted systems or system services as they are invoked. They can be acquired from various external sources, and propagated into the system and from there into system services. Credentials may optionally be encrypted with a machine-specific key and/or locked to the local TPM2 device, and are only decrypted when the consuming service is invoked.

System credentials may be used to provision and configure various aspects of the system. Depending on the consuming component credentials are only used on initial invocations or are needed for all invocations.

Credentials may be used for any kind of data, binary or text, and may carry passwords, secrets, certificates, cryptographic key material, identity information, configuration, and more.

Well known system credentials

firstboot.keymap

The console key mapping to set (e.g. "de"). Read by systemd-firstboot(1), and only honoured if no console keymap has been configured before.

firstboot.locale, firstboot.locale-messages

The system locale to set (e.g. "de_DE.UTF-8"). Read by systemd-firstboot(1), and only honoured if no locale has been configured before. firstboot.locale sets "LANG", while firstboot.locale-message sets "LC_MESSAGES".

firstboot.timezone

The system timezone to set (e.g. "Europe/Berlin"). Read by systemd-firstboot(1), and only honoured if no system timezone has been configured before.

login.issue

The data of this credential is written to /etc/issue.d/50-provision.conf, if the file doesn't exist yet. agetty(8) reads this file and shows its contents at the login prompt of terminal logins. See issue(5) for details.

Consumed by /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/provision.conf, see tmpfiles.d(5).

login.motd

The data of this credential is written to /etc/motd.d/50-provision.conf, if the file doesn't exist yet. pam_motd(8) reads this file and shows its contents as "message of the day" during terminal logins. See motd(5) for details.

Consumed by /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/provision.conf, see tmpfiles.d(5).

network.hosts

The data of this credential is written to /etc/hosts, if the file doesn't exist yet. See hosts(5) for details.

Consumed by /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/provision.conf, see tmpfiles.d(5).

network.dns, network.search_domains

DNS server information and search domains. Read by systemd-resolved.service(8).

passwd.hashed-password.root, passwd.plaintext-password.root

May contain the password (either in UNIX hashed format, or in plaintext) for the root users. Read by both systemd-firstboot(1) and systemd-sysusers(1), and only honoured if no root password has been configured before.

passwd.shell.root

The path to the shell program (e.g. "/bin/bash") for the root user. Read by both systemd-firstboot(1) and systemd-sysusers(1), and only honoured if no root shell has been configured before.

ssh.authorized_keys.root

The data of this credential is written to /root/.ssh/authorized_keys, if the file doesn't exist yet. This allows provisioning SSH access for the system's root user.

Consumed by /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/provision.conf, see tmpfiles.d(5).

sysusers.extra

Additional sysusers.d(5) lines to process during boot.

sysctl.extra

Additional sysctl.d(5) lines to process during boot.

tmpfiles.extra

Additional tmpfiles.d(5) lines to process during boot.

fstab.extra

Additional mounts to establish at boot. For details, see systemd-fstab-generator(8).

vconsole.keymap, vconsole.keymap_toggle, vconsole.font, vconsole.font_map, vconsole.font_unimap

Console settings to apply, see systemd-vconsole-setup.service(8) for details.

getty.ttys.serial, getty.ttys.container

Used for spawning additional login prompts, see systemd-getty-generator(8) for details.

vmm.notify_socket

Configures an sd_notify(3) compatible AF_VSOCK socket the service manager will report status information, ready notification and exit status on. For details see systemd(1).

system.machine_id

Takes a 128bit ID to initialize the machine ID from (if it is not set yet). Interpreted by the service manager (PID 1). For details see systemd(1).

See Also

systemd(1), kernel-command-line(7), smbios-type-11(7)