capsule@.service — System unit for the capsule service manager
capsule@NAME.service
Service managers for capsules run in
    capsule@ system units, with the capsule name as the
    instance identifier. Capsules are way to run additional instances of the service manager, under dynamic
    user IDs, i.e. UIDs that are allocated when the capsule service manager is started, and released when it
    is stopped.NAME.service
In many ways capsule@.service is similar to the per-user
    user@.service service manager, but there are a few important distinctions:
The capsule service manager utilizes DynamicUser= (see
      systemd.exec(5)) to
      allocate a new UID dynamically on invocation. The user name is automatically generated from the capsule
      name, by prefixing "c-". The UID is released when the service is terminated. The user
      service manager on the other hand operates under a statically allocated user ID that must be
      pre-existing, before the user service manager is invoked.
User service managers register themselves with pam(8), capsule service managers do not.
User service managers typically read their configuration from a
      $HOME directory below /home/, capsule service managers from a
      $HOME directory below /var/lib/capsules/.
User service managers are collectively contained in the user.slice
      unit, capsule service managers in capsule.slice. Also see
      systemd.special(7).
User service managers start the user unit default.target
      initially. Capsule service managers invoke the user unit capsule@.target
      instead.
The capsule service manager and the capsule's bus broker can be reached via the
    --capsule= switch to
    systemctl(1),
    systemd-run(1) and
    busctl(1).
New capsules can be started via a simple systemctl start
    capsule@NAME.service command, and stopped via systemctl
    stop capsule@NAME.service. Starting a capsule will implicitly create
    a home directory /var/lib/capsules/, if missing. A
    runtime directory is created as NAME//run/capsules/. To
    remove these resources use systemctl clean capsule@NAME/NAME.service,
    for example with the --what=all switch.
The capsule@.service unit invokes a systemd --user
    service manager process. This means unit files are looked for according to the sames rules as for regular user
    service managers, for example in
    /var/lib/capsules/.NAME/.config/systemd/user/
Capsule names may be chosen freely by the user, however, they must be suitable as UNIX filenames
    (i.e. 255 characters max, and contain no "/"), and when prefixed with
    "p-" be suitable as a user name matching strict POSIX rules, see User/Group Name Syntax for details.
Example 1. Create a new capsule, invoke two programs in it (one interactively), terminate it, and clean everything up
# systemctl start capsule@tatze.service # systemd-run --capsule=tatze --unit=sleeptest.service sleep 999 # systemctl --capsule=tatze status sleeptest.service # systemd-run -t --capsule=tatze bash # systemctl --capsule=tatze stop sleeptest.service # systemctl stop capsule@tatze.service # systemctl clean --all capsule@tatze.service