Only services that meet the criteria below are permitted to be enabled by default on package installation.
For the purposes of this document, a "service" is defined as one or more of:
If a service does not require manual configuration to be functional and does not listen on a network socket for connections originating on a separate physical or virtual machine, it may be enabled by default (but is not required to do so).
Example: Local D-BUS services
In addition, any service which does not remain persistent on the system (aka, it "runs once then goes away"), does not listen to incoming connections during initialization, and does not require configuration to be functional may be enabled by default (but is not required to do so).
Example: iptables
Some services which are permitted to be enabled by default as specific exceptions. Services that should be enabled by default throughout all of Fedora must be approved by FESCo. Services that should be enabled or disabled by default only on one or more of the Fedora Editions must be approved by those Editions' Working Groups.
Example:
Unit files must correspond to the Fedora Packaging Guidelines. Services are enabled or disabled by default through systemd preset files. Preset files can be overridden by a local administrator, but a set of defaults are provided by Fedora.
If the service should be enabled by default, it must be added to one of the distribution presets files (see above).
For services which meet one of the conditions listed above, a ticket should be filed in bugzilla. If the preset should be changed for versions other than rawhide, indicate that in the ticket.