After not booting an Arch box for several days, the first few minutes seem quite MS like lately with a flurry of processes running to the point after I enter my username at the console, it may be 10-20 sec before the password prompt is displayed. Since it's all timers now and not cron running things quietly at 4:00 am, this loads sever processes right at boot that cause the problem. For example, boot just now was crawling and checking systemctl timers shows: (leading columns snipped) LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES n/a n/a systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer systemd-t> Thu 2019-11-21 03:33:43 CST 11min ago logrotate.timer logrotate> Thu 2019-11-21 03:33:43 CST 11min ago man-db.timer man-db.se> Thu 2019-11-21 03:33:43 CST 11min ago shadow.timer shadow.se> 4 timers listed. Pass --all to see loaded but inactive timers, too. This impacts being able to get thins from a computer in a hurry and reminds me of the unpleasant waits waiting for windows to run all of its on-boot checks. What is the best way to modify this scheme to prevent, e.g. logrotate.time, man-db.timer and shadow.timer all trying to run on boot? I'd rather set them up to run a 5:00 localtime as I would with cronnie. But I do want to use the systemd timer, so what is the best way to configure the systemd timer to schedule these things to run at a convenient time instead of all firing on boot? -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.