From Fedora Project Wiki
Description
This test case tests whether starting, stopping, enabling and disabling system services works as expected.
Setup
- Perform an installation of the Fedora release you wish to test, making as few choices as possible and making the most obvious and simple choices where choice is required
How to test
- Log in to the installed system
- In a console, run the following commands:
su -c 'systemctl stop chronyd.service'
su -c 'systemctl disable chronyd.service'
- Now reboot. Log in again, and run the following commands:
su -c 'systemctl status chronyd.service'
ps aux | grep chronyd
su -c 'systemctl start chronyd.service'
su -c 'systemctl status chronyd.service'
ps aux | grep chronyd
su -c 'systemctl stop chronyd.service'
su -c 'systemctl status chronyd.service'
ps aux | grep chronyd
su -c 'systemctl enable chronyd.service'
- Now reboot. Log in again, and run the following commands:
su -c 'systemctl status chronyd.service'
ps aux | grep chronyd
su -c 'systemctl disable chronyd.service'
- Now reboot. Log in again, and run the following commands:
su -c 'systemctl status chronyd.service'
ps aux | grep chronyd
Expected Results
- Each time they appear, the commands
su -c 'systemctl status chronyd.service'
andps aux | grep chronyd
check whether the service is running. The expected results, in order, are:- Disabled and inactive (not running)
- Disabled but active (running)
- Disabled and inactive (not running)
- Enabled and active (running)
- Disabled and inactive (not running)