Which, when I ran them as my user I was prompted (graphically) to enter the root password, which I duly supplied. But, I did try it using sudo and as root directly:

[mark.haney@aurelian ~]$ sudo systemctl enable ssdm  
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory
[mark.haney@aurelian ~]$ sudo systemctl enable ssdm --force
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory
[mark.haney@aurelian ~]$ sudo su
[root@aurelian mark.haney]# systemctl enable ssdm
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory
[root@aurelian mark.haney]# systemctl enable ssdm --force
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory


On Fri, Apr 1, 2016 at 10:20 AM, Rex Dieter <rdieter@math.unl.edu> wrote:
Sérgio Basto wrote:

> On Sex, 2016-04-01 at 10:10 -0400, Mark Haney wrote:
>> Huh.  This is odd.  When I run that command I get this: (withor
>> without the --force option)
>>
>> @aurelian ~]$ systemctl enable ssdm
>> Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory
>>
>> @aurelian ~]$ systemctl enable ssdm.service
>> Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory
>
> systemctl disable kdm
> systemctl enable sddm

The explicit disable is not needed, but you *do* need to run any of those
systemctl commands with priviledge (as root)

This should be sufficient:

sudo systemctl enable sddm --force

-- Rex
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