systemd-inhibit — Execute a program with an inhibition lock taken
systemd-inhibit [OPTIONS...] [COMMAND] [ARGUMENTS...]
systemd-inhibit [OPTIONS...] --list
systemd-inhibit may be used to execute a program with a shutdown, sleep or idle inhibitor lock taken. The lock will be acquired before the specified command line is executed and released afterwards.
Inhibitor locks may be used to block or delay system sleep and shutdown requests from the user, as well as automatic idle handling of the OS. This is useful to avoid system suspends while an optical disc is being recorded, or similar operations that should not be interrupted.
For more information see the Inhibitor Lock Developer Documentation.
The following options are understood:
--what=
¶Takes a colon-separated list of one or more
operations to inhibit:
"shutdown
",
"sleep
",
"idle
",
"handle-power-key
",
"handle-suspend-key
",
"handle-hibernate-key
",
"handle-lid-switch
",
for inhibiting reboot/power-off/halt/kexec,
suspending/hibernating, the automatic idle detection, or the
low-level handling of the power/sleep key and the lid switch,
respectively. If omitted, defaults to
"idle:sleep:shutdown
".
--who=
¶Takes a short, human-readable descriptive string for the program taking the lock. If not passed, defaults to the command line string.
--why=
¶Takes a short, human-readable descriptive string for the reason for taking the lock. Defaults to "Unknown reason".
--mode=
¶Takes either "block
" or
"delay
" and describes how the lock is
applied. If "block
" is used (the default),
the lock prohibits any of the requested operations without
time limit, and only privileged users may override it. If
"delay
" is used, the lock can only delay the
requested operations for a limited time. If the time elapses,
the lock is ignored and the operation executed. The time limit
may be specified in
logind.conf(5).
Note that "delay
" is only available for
"sleep
" and
"shutdown
".
--list
¶Lists all active inhibition locks instead of acquiring one.
-h
, --help
¶--version
¶