machinectl — Control the systemd machine manager
machinectl  [OPTIONS...] {COMMAND} [NAME...]
machinectl may be used to introspect and control the state of the systemd(1) virtual machine and container registration manager systemd-machined.service(8).
machinectl may be used to execute operations on machines and images. Machines in this sense are considered running instances of:
Virtual Machines (VMs) that virtualize hardware to run full operating system (OS) instances (including their kernels) in a virtualized environment on top of the host OS.
Containers that share the hardware and OS kernel with the host OS, in order to run OS userspace instances on top the host OS.
The host system itself.
Machines are identified by names that follow the same rules as UNIX and DNS hostnames. For details, see below.
Machines are instantiated from disk or file system images that frequently — but not necessarily — carry the same name as machines running from them. Images in this sense may be:
Directory trees containing an OS, including the
      top-level directories /usr/,
      /etc/, and so on.
btrfs subvolumes containing OS trees, similar to regular directory trees.
Binary "raw" disk image files containing MBR or GPT partition tables and Linux file systems.
Similarly, block devices containing MBR or GPT partition tables and file systems.
The file system tree of the host OS itself.
Images may be downloaded, imported and exported via the importctl(1) tool.
The following commands are understood:
List currently running (online) virtual
        machines and containers. To enumerate machine images that can
        be started, use list-images (see
        below). Note that this command hides the special
        ".host" machine by default. Use the
        --all switch to show it.
NAME…¶Show runtime status information about one or more virtual machines and containers, followed by the most recent log data from the journal. This function is intended to generate human-readable output. If you are looking for computer-parsable output, use show instead. Note that the log data shown is reported by the virtual machine or container manager, and frequently contains console output of the machine, but not necessarily journal contents of the machine itself.
NAME…]¶Show properties of one or more registered virtual machines or containers or the manager
        itself. If no argument is specified, properties of the manager will be shown. If a NAME is specified,
        properties of this virtual machine or container are shown. By default, empty properties are suppressed. Use
        --all to show those too.  To select specific properties to show, use
        --property=. This command is intended to be used whenever computer-parsable output is
        required, and does not print the control group tree or journal entries. Use status if you
        are looking for formatted human-readable output.
NAME…¶Start a container as a system service, using
        systemd-nspawn(1).
        This starts systemd-nspawn@.service,
        instantiated for the specified machine name, similar to the
        effect of systemctl start on the service
        name. systemd-nspawn looks for a container
        image by the specified name in
        /var/lib/machines/ (and other search
        paths, see below) and runs it. Use
        list-images (see below) for listing
        available container images to start.
Note that systemd-machined.service(8) also interfaces with a variety of other container and VM managers, systemd-nspawn is just one implementation of it. Most of the commands available in machinectl may be used on containers or VMs controlled by other managers, not just systemd-nspawn. Starting VMs and container images on those managers requires manager-specific tools.
To interactively start a container on the command line with full access to the container's console, please invoke systemd-nspawn directly. To stop a running container use machinectl poweroff.
NAME]¶Open an interactive terminal login session in
        a container or on the local host. If an argument is supplied,
        it refers to the container machine to connect to. If none is
        specified, or the container name is specified as the empty
        string, or the special machine name ".host"
        (see below) is specified, the connection is made to the local
        host instead. This will create a TTY connection to a specific
        container or the local host and asks for the execution of a
        getty on it. Note that this is only supported for containers
        running
        systemd(1)
        as init system.
This command will open a full login prompt on the
        container or the local host, which then asks for username and
        password. Use shell (see below) or
        systemd-run(1)
        with the --machine= switch to directly invoke
        a single command, either interactively or in the
        background.
NAME@]NAME [PATH [ARGUMENTS…]]] ¶Open an interactive shell session in a
        container or on the local host. The first argument refers to
        the container machine to connect to. If none is specified, or
        the machine name is specified as the empty string, or the
        special machine name ".host" (see below) is
        specified, the connection is made to the local host
        instead. This works similarly to login, but
        immediately invokes a user process. This command runs the
        specified executable with the specified arguments, or the
        default shell for the user if none is specified, or
        /bin/sh if no default shell is found. By default,
        --uid=, or by prefixing the machine name with
        a username and an "@" character, a different
        user may be selected. Use --setenv= to set
        environment variables for the executed process.
Note that machinectl shell does not propagate the exit code/status of the invoked shell process. Use systemd-run instead if that information is required (see below).
Using the shell command without arguments (thus invoking the executed shell or command on the local host), is in many ways similar to a su(1) session, but, unlike su, completely isolates the new session from the originating session, so that it shares no process or session properties and is in a clean well-defined state. It will be tracked in a new utmp, login, audit, security, and keyring sessions, and will not inherit any environment variables or resource limits, among other properties.
Note that
        systemd-run(1) with
        its --machine= switch may be used in place of the machinectl
        shell command, and allows non-interactive operation, more detailed and low-level
        configuration of the invoked unit, as well as access to runtime and exit code/status information of
        the invoked shell process. In particular, use systemd-run's
        --wait switch to propagate exit status information of the invoked process. Use
        systemd-run's --pty switch to acquire an interactive shell,
        similarly to machinectl shell. In general, systemd-run is
        preferable for scripting purposes. However, note that systemd-run might require
        higher privileges than machinectl shell.
NAME…, disable NAME…¶Enable or disable a container as a system service to start at system boot, using
        systemd-nspawn(1).
        This enables or disables systemd-nspawn@.service, instantiated for the specified
        machine name, similarly to the effect of systemctl enable or systemctl
        disable on the service name.
This command implicitly reloads the system manager configuration after completing the operation.
        Note that this command does not implicitly start or power off the containers that are being operated on.
        If this is desired, combine the command with the --now switch.
NAME…¶Power off one or more containers. This will trigger a shutdown by sending SIGRTMIN+4 to the container's init process, which causes systemd-compatible init systems to shut down cleanly. Use stop as alias for poweroff. This operation does not work on containers that do not run a systemd(1)-compatible init system, such as sysvinit. Use terminate (see below) to immediately terminate a container or VM, without cleanly shutting it down.
NAME…¶Reboot one or more containers. This will trigger a reboot by sending SIGINT to the container's init process, which is roughly equivalent to pressing Ctrl+Alt+Del on a non-containerized system, and is compatible with containers running any system manager. Use restart as alias for reboot.
NAME…¶Immediately terminates a virtual machine or container, without cleanly shutting it down. This kills all processes of the virtual machine or container and deallocates all resources attached to that instance. Use poweroff to issue a clean shutdown request.
NAME…¶Send a signal to one or more processes of the
        virtual machine or container. This means processes as seen by
        the host, not the processes inside the virtual machine or
        container. Use --kill-whom= to select which
        process to kill. Use --signal= to select the
        signal to send.
NAME PATH [PATH]¶Bind mounts a file or directory from the host into the specified container. The first path
        argument is the source file or directory on the host, the second path argument is the destination file or
        directory in the container. When the latter is omitted, the destination path in the container is the same as
        the source path on the host. When combined with the --read-only switch, a ready-only bind
        mount is created. When combined with the --mkdir switch, the destination path is first created
        before the mount is applied. Note that this option is currently only supported for
        systemd-nspawn(1) containers,
        and only if user namespacing (--private-users) is not used. This command supports bind
        mounting directories, regular files, device nodes, AF_UNIX socket nodes, as well as
        FIFOs.
NAME PATH [PATH] --force¶Copies files or directories from the host system into a running container. Takes a container name, followed by the source path on the host and the destination path in the container. If the destination path is omitted, the same as the source path is used.
If host and container share the same user and group namespace, file ownership by numeric user ID and group ID is preserved for the copy, otherwise all files and directories in the copy will be owned by the root user and group (UID/GID 0).
NAME PATH [PATH] --force¶Copies files or directories from a container into the host system. Takes a container name, followed by the source path in the container and the destination path on the host. If the destination path is omitted, the same as the source path is used.
If host and container share the same user and group namespace, file ownership by numeric user ID and group ID is preserved for the copy, otherwise all files and directories in the copy will be owned by the root user and group (UID/GID 0).
Show a list of locally installed container and
        VM images. This enumerates all raw disk images and container
        directories and subvolumes in
        /var/lib/machines/ (and other search
        paths, see below). Use start (see above) to
        run a container off one of the listed images. Note that, by
        default, containers whose name begins with a dot
        (".") are not shown. To show these too,
        specify --all. Note that a special image
        ".host" always implicitly exists and refers
        to the image the host itself is booted from.
NAME…]¶Show terse status information about one or more container or VM images. This function is intended to generate human-readable output. Use show-image (see below) to generate computer-parsable output instead.
NAME…]¶Show properties of one or more registered
        virtual machine or container images, or the manager itself. If
        no argument is specified, properties of the manager will be
        shown. If a NAME is specified, properties of this virtual
        machine or container image are shown. By default, empty
        properties are suppressed. Use --all to show
        those too. To select specific properties to show, use
        --property=. This command is intended to be
        used whenever computer-parsable output is required. Use
        image-status if you are looking for
        formatted human-readable output.
NAME|FILE¶Edit the settings file of the specified machines. For the format of the settings
        file, refer to
        systemd.nspawn(5).
        If an existing settings file of the given machine can't be found, edit
        automatically create a new settings file from scratch under
        /etc/systemd/nspawn/.
        
NAME|FILE¶Show the settings file of the specified machines.
NAME NAME¶Clones a container or VM image. The arguments specify the name of the image to clone and the name of the newly cloned image. Note that plain directory container images are cloned into btrfs subvolume images with this command, if the underlying file system supports this. Note that cloning a container or VM image is optimized for file systems that support copy-on-write, and might not be efficient on others, due to file system limitations.
Note that this command leaves hostname, machine ID and all other settings that could identify the instance unmodified. The original image and the cloned copy will hence share these credentials, and it might be necessary to manually change them in the copy.
If combined with the --read-only switch a read-only cloned image is
        created.
NAME NAME¶Renames a container or VM image. The arguments specify the name of the image to rename and the new name of the image.
NAME [BOOL]¶Marks or (unmarks) a container or VM image read-only. Takes a VM or container image name, followed by a boolean as arguments. If the boolean is omitted, positive is implied, i.e. the image is marked read-only.
NAME…¶Removes one or more container or VM images.
        The special image ".host", which refers to
        the host's own directory tree, may not be
        removed.
NAME] BYTES¶Sets the maximum size in bytes that a specific
        container or VM image, or all images, may grow up to on disk
        (disk quota). Takes either one or two parameters. The first,
        optional parameter refers to a container or VM image name. If
        specified, the size limit of the specified image is changed. If
        omitted, the overall size limit of the sum of all images stored
        locally is changed. The final argument specifies the size
        limit in bytes, possibly suffixed by the usual K, M, G, T
        units. If the size limit shall be disabled, specify
        "-" as size.
Note that per-container size limits are only supported on btrfs file systems.
Remove hidden VM or container images (or all). This command removes all hidden machine images
        from /var/lib/machines/, i.e. those whose name begins with a dot. Use machinectl
        list-images --all to see a list of all machine images, including the hidden ones.
When combined with the --all switch removes all images, not just hidden ones. This
        command effectively empties /var/lib/machines/.
Note that commands such as importctl pull-tar or importctl pull-raw usually create hidden, read-only, unmodified machine images from the downloaded image first, before cloning a writable working copy of it, in order to avoid duplicate downloads in case of images that are reused multiple times. Use machinectl clean to remove old, hidden images created this way.
The following options are understood:
-p, --property=¶When showing machine or image properties,
        limit the output to certain properties as specified by the
        argument. If not specified, all set properties are shown. The
        argument should be a property name, such as
        "Name". If specified more than once, all
        properties with the specified names are
        shown.
--value¶When printing properties with show, only print the value,
        and skip the property name and "=".
-P¶Equivalent to --value --property=, i.e. shows the value of the
      property without the property name or "=". Note that using -P once
      will also affect all properties listed with -p/--property=.
-a, --all¶When showing machine or image properties, show all properties regardless of whether they are set or not.
When listing VM or container images, do not suppress
        images beginning in a dot character
        (".").
When cleaning VM or container images, remove all images, not just hidden ones.
-l, --full¶Do not ellipsize process tree entries or table. This implies
        --max-addresses=full.
--kill-whom=¶When used with kill, choose
        which processes to kill. Must be one of
        leader, or all to select
        whether to kill only the leader process of the machine or all
        processes of the machine. If omitted, defaults to
        all.
-s, --signal=¶When used with kill, choose which signal to send to selected processes. Must
      be one of the well-known signal specifiers such as SIGTERM,
      SIGINT or SIGSTOP. If omitted, defaults to
      SIGTERM.
The special value "help" will list the known values and the program will exit
      immediately, and the special value "list" will list known values along with the
      numerical signal numbers and the program will exit immediately.
--uid=¶When used with the shell command, chooses the user ID to
         open the interactive shell session as. If the argument to the shell
         command also specifies a user name, this option is ignored. If the name is not specified
         in either way, "root" will be used by default. Note that this switch is
         not supported for the login command (see below).
-E NAME[=VALUE], --setenv=NAME[=VALUE]¶When used with the shell command, sets an environment variable for
        the executed shell. This option may be used more than once to set multiple variables. When
        "=" and VALUE are omitted, the value of the variable with
        the same name in the program environment will be used.
Note that this option is not supported for the login command.
--mkdir¶When used with bind, creates the destination file or directory before applying the bind mount. Note that even though the name of this option suggests that it is suitable only for directories, this option also creates the destination file node to mount over if the object to mount is not a directory, but a regular file, device node, socket or FIFO.
--read-only¶When used with bind, creates a read-only bind mount.
When used with clone a read-only container or VM image is created.
-n, --lines=¶When used with status, controls the number of journal lines to show, counting from the most recent ones. Takes a positive integer argument. Defaults to 10.
-o, --output=¶When used with status,
        controls the formatting of the journal entries that are shown.
        For the available choices, see
        journalctl(1).
        Defaults to "short".
--runner=nspawn|vmspawn¶When operating on machines choose whether to use systemd-nspawn(1) or systemd-vmspawn(1). By default systemd-nspawn(1) is used.
-V¶-V is a shorthand for --runner=vmspawn.
--now¶When used with enable or disable, the containers will also be started or powered off. The start or poweroff operation is only carried out when the respective enable or disable operation has been successful.
--force¶Replace target file when copying files.
--max-addresses=¶When used with the list-machines command, limits the number of IP
        addresses shown for every machine. Defaults to 1. All addresses can be requested with
        "all". If the limit is 0, the address column is not shown. Otherwise, if the machine
        has more addresses than shown, "…" follows the last address.
-q, --quiet¶Suppresses additional informational output while running.
-H, --host=¶Execute the operation remotely. Specify a hostname, or a
      username and hostname separated by "@", to
      connect to. The hostname may optionally be suffixed by a
      port ssh is listening on, separated by ":", and then a
      container name, separated by "/", which
      connects directly to a specific container on the specified
      host. This will use SSH to talk to the remote machine manager
      instance. Container names may be enumerated with
      machinectl -H
      HOST. Put IPv6 addresses in brackets.
-M, --machine=¶Connect to systemd-machined.service(8) running in a local container, to perform the specified operation within the container.
--no-pager¶Do not pipe output into a pager.
--no-legend¶Do not print the legend, i.e. column headers and the footer with hints.
--no-ask-password¶Do not query the user for authentication for privileged operations.
-h, --help¶--version¶The machinectl tool operates on machines and images whose names must be chosen following strict rules. Machine names must be suitable for use as hostnames following a conservative subset of DNS and UNIX/Linux semantics. Specifically, they must consist of one or more non-empty label strings, separated by dots. No leading or trailing dots are allowed. No sequences of multiple dots are allowed. The label strings may only consist of alphanumeric characters as well as the dash and underscore. The maximum length of a machine name is 64 characters.
A special machine with the name ".host"
    refers to the running host system itself. This is useful for execution
    operations or inspecting the host system as well. Note that
    machinectl list will not show this special
    machine unless the --all switch is specified.
Requirements on image names are less strict, however, they must be valid UTF-8, must be suitable as file names (hence not be the single or double dot, and not include a slash), and may not contain control characters. Since many operations search for an image by the name of a requested machine, it is recommended to name images in the same strict fashion as machines.
A special image with the name ".host"
    refers to the image of the running host system. It hence
    conceptually maps to the special ".host" machine
    name described above. Note that machinectl
    list-images will not show this special image either, unless
    --all is specified.
Machine images are preferably stored in
    /var/lib/machines/, but are also searched for
    in /usr/local/lib/machines/ and
    /usr/lib/machines/. For compatibility reasons,
    the directory /var/lib/container/ is
    searched, too. Note that images stored below
    /usr/ are always considered read-only. It is
    possible to symlink machines images from other directories into
    /var/lib/machines/ to make them available for
    control with machinectl.
Note that some image operations are only supported, efficient or atomic on btrfs file systems.
Disk images are understood by systemd-nspawn(1) and machinectl in three formats:
A simple directory tree, containing the files and directories of the container to boot.
Subvolumes (on btrfs file systems), which are similar to the simple directories, described above. However, they have additional benefits, such as efficient cloning and quota reporting.
"Raw" disk images, i.e. binary images of disks
      with a GPT or MBR partition table. Images of this type are
      regular files with the suffix
      ".raw".
See
    systemd-nspawn(1)
    for more information on image formats, in particular its
    --directory= and --image=
    options.
Example 1. Download an Ubuntu RAW image, set a root password in it, start it as a service
# importctl pull-raw -mN \
      https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/jammy/current/jammy-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk-kvm.img \
      jammy
# systemd-firstboot --image=/var/lib/machines/jammy.raw --prompt-root-password --force
# machinectl start jammy
# machinectl login jammyThis downloads the specified .raw image and makes it available under the
      local name "jammy". Then, a root password is set with
      systemd-firstboot(1). Afterwards
      the machine is started as system service. With the last command a login prompt into the container is
      requested.
$SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL¶The maximum log level of emitted messages (messages with a higher
      log level, i.e. less important ones, will be suppressed). Takes a comma-separated list of values. A
      value may be either one of (in order of decreasing importance) emerg,
      alert, crit, err,
      warning, notice, info,
      debug, or an integer in the range 0…7. See
      syslog(3)
      for more information. Each value may optionally be prefixed with one of console,
      syslog, kmsg or journal followed by a
      colon to set the maximum log level for that specific log target (e.g.
      SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug,console:info specifies to log at debug level except when
      logging to the console which should be at info level). Note that the global maximum log level takes
      priority over any per target maximum log levels.
$SYSTEMD_LOG_COLOR¶A boolean. If true, messages written to the tty will be colored according to priority.
This setting is only useful when messages are written directly to the terminal, because journalctl(1) and other tools that display logs will color messages based on the log level on their own.
$SYSTEMD_LOG_TIME¶A boolean. If true, console log messages will be prefixed with a timestamp.
This setting is only useful when messages are written directly to the terminal or a file, because journalctl(1) and other tools that display logs will attach timestamps based on the entry metadata on their own.
$SYSTEMD_LOG_LOCATION¶A boolean. If true, messages will be prefixed with a filename and line number in the source code where the message originates.
Note that the log location is often attached as metadata to journal entries anyway. Including it directly in the message text can nevertheless be convenient when debugging programs.
$SYSTEMD_LOG_TID¶A boolean. If true, messages will be prefixed with the current numerical thread ID (TID).
Note that the this information is attached as metadata to journal entries anyway. Including it directly in the message text can nevertheless be convenient when debugging programs.
$SYSTEMD_LOG_TARGET¶The destination for log messages. One of
      console (log to the attached tty), console-prefixed (log to
      the attached tty but with prefixes encoding the log level and "facility", see syslog(3),
      kmsg (log to the kernel circular log buffer), journal (log to
      the journal), journal-or-kmsg (log to the journal if available, and to kmsg
      otherwise), auto (determine the appropriate log target automatically, the default),
      null (disable log output).
$SYSTEMD_LOG_RATELIMIT_KMSG¶ Whether to ratelimit kmsg or not. Takes a boolean.
      Defaults to "true". If disabled, systemd will not ratelimit messages written to kmsg.
      
$SYSTEMD_PAGER¶Pager to use when --no-pager is not given; overrides
      $PAGER. If neither $SYSTEMD_PAGER nor $PAGER are set, a
      set of well-known pager implementations are tried in turn, including
      less(1) and
      more(1), until one is found. If
      no pager implementation is discovered no pager is invoked. Setting this environment variable to an empty string
      or the value "cat" is equivalent to passing --no-pager.
Note: if $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set, $SYSTEMD_PAGER
      (as well as $PAGER) will be silently ignored.
$SYSTEMD_LESS¶Override the options passed to less (by default
      "FRSXMK").
Users might want to change two options in particular:
K¶This option instructs the pager to exit immediately when Ctrl+C is pressed. To allow less to handle Ctrl+C itself to switch back to the pager command prompt, unset this option.
If the value of $SYSTEMD_LESS does not include "K",
            and the pager that is invoked is less,
            Ctrl+C will be ignored by the
            executable, and needs to be handled by the pager.
X¶This option instructs the pager to not send termcap initialization and deinitialization strings to the terminal. It is set by default to allow command output to remain visible in the terminal even after the pager exits. Nevertheless, this prevents some pager functionality from working, in particular paged output cannot be scrolled with the mouse.
Note that setting the regular $LESS environment variable has no effect
      for less invocations by systemd tools.
See less(1) for more discussion.
$SYSTEMD_LESSCHARSET¶Override the charset passed to less (by default "utf-8", if
      the invoking terminal is determined to be UTF-8 compatible).
Note that setting the regular $LESSCHARSET environment variable has no effect
      for less invocations by systemd tools.
$SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE¶Takes a boolean argument. When true, the "secure" mode of the pager is enabled; if
      false, disabled. If $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set at all, secure mode is enabled
      if the effective UID is not the same as the owner of the login session, see
      geteuid(2)
      and sd_pid_get_owner_uid(3).
      In secure mode, LESSSECURE=1 will be set when invoking the pager, and the pager shall
      disable commands that open or create new files or start new subprocesses. When
      $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE is not set at all, pagers which are not known to implement
      secure mode will not be used. (Currently only
      less(1)
      implements secure mode.)
Note: when commands are invoked with elevated privileges, for example under sudo(8) or
      pkexec(1), care
      must be taken to ensure that unintended interactive features are not enabled. "Secure" mode for the
      pager may be enabled automatically as describe above. Setting SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE=0
      or not removing it from the inherited environment allows the user to invoke arbitrary commands. Note
      that if the $SYSTEMD_PAGER or $PAGER variables are to be
      honoured, $SYSTEMD_PAGERSECURE must be set too. It might be reasonable to completely
      disable the pager using --no-pager instead.
$SYSTEMD_COLORS¶Takes a boolean argument. When true, systemd and related utilities
      will use colors in their output, otherwise the output will be monochrome. Additionally, the variable can
      take one of the following special values: "16", "256" to restrict the use
      of colors to the base 16 or 256 ANSI colors, respectively. This can be specified to override the automatic
      decision based on $TERM and what the console is connected to.
$SYSTEMD_URLIFY¶The value must be a boolean. Controls whether clickable links should be generated in
      the output for terminal emulators supporting this. This can be specified to override the decision that
      systemd makes based on $TERM and other conditions.