Files
haproxy/admin/systemd/haproxy.service.in
William Lallemand 90c5618ed5 MEDIUM: systemd: implement directory loading
Redhat-based system already use a CFGDIR variable to load configuration
files from a directory, this patch implements the same feature.

It now requires that /etc/haproxy/conf.d exists or the service won't be
able to start.
2026-01-16 09:55:33 +01:00

38 lines
1.4 KiB
SYSTEMD

[Unit]
Description=HAProxy Load Balancer
After=network-online.target
Wants=network-online.target
[Service]
EnvironmentFile=-/etc/default/haproxy
EnvironmentFile=-/etc/sysconfig/haproxy
Environment="CONFIG=/etc/haproxy/haproxy.cfg" "PIDFILE=/run/haproxy.pid" "CFGDIR=/etc/haproxy/conf.d" "EXTRAOPTS=-S /run/haproxy-master.sock"
ExecStart=@SBINDIR@/haproxy -Ws -f $CONFIG -f $CFGDIR -p $PIDFILE $EXTRAOPTS
ExecReload=@SBINDIR@/haproxy -Ws -f $CONFIG -f $CFGDIR -c $EXTRAOPTS
ExecReload=/bin/kill -USR2 $MAINPID
KillMode=mixed
Restart=always
SuccessExitStatus=143
Type=notify
# The following lines leverage SystemD's sandboxing options to provide
# defense in depth protection at the expense of restricting some flexibility
# in your setup (e.g. placement of your configuration files) or possibly
# reduced performance. See systemd.service(5) and systemd.exec(5) for further
# information.
# NoNewPrivileges=true
# ProtectHome=true
# If you want to use 'ProtectSystem=strict' you should whitelist the PIDFILE,
# any state files and any other files written using 'ReadWritePaths' or
# 'RuntimeDirectory'.
# ProtectSystem=true
# ProtectKernelTunables=true
# ProtectKernelModules=true
# ProtectControlGroups=true
# If your SystemD version supports them, you can add: @reboot, @swap, @sync
# SystemCallFilter=~@cpu-emulation @keyring @module @obsolete @raw-io
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target