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/lib/systemd/system/heartbeat.service is in heartbeat 1:3.0.6-7.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

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[Unit]
Description=Heartbeat High Availability Cluster Communication and Membership
# partially copied and adapted from the pacemaker.service file

After=basic.target
After=network.target

Requires=basic.target
Requires=network.target

After=drbd.service

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

[Service]
Type=simple
User=root
KillMode=process
NotifyAccess=main
EnvironmentFile=-/etc/sysconfig/heartbeat
EnvironmentFile=-/etc/sysconfig/pacemaker

ExecStart=/usr/lib/heartbeat/heartbeat -f
ExecStop=/usr/lib/heartbeat/heartbeat -k
PIDFile=/var/run/heartbeat.pid

# If heartbeat/pacemaker doesn't stop, its probably waiting on a cluster
# resource.  Sending -KILL will just get the node fenced
SendSIGKILL=no

# If we ever hit the StartLimitInterval/StartLimitBurst limit and the
# admin wants to stop the cluster while pacemakerd is not running, it
# might be a good idea to enable the ExecStopPost directive below.
#
# Although the node will likely end up being fenced as a result so its
# not on by default
#
# ExecStopPost=/usr/bin/killall -TERM crmd attrd fenced cib pengine lrmd

# Uncomment this for older versions of systemd that didn't support
# TimeoutStopSec
# TimeoutSec=30min

# Heartbeat/Pacemaker can only exit after all managed services have shut down
# A HA database could conceivably take even longer than this
TimeoutStopSec=30min
TimeoutStartSec=60s

# Restart options include: no, on-success, on-failure, on-abort or always
Restart=no