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- unstable 3.06-4
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| INIT-D-SCRIPT(5) | File Formats Manual (debian sysvinit) | INIT-D-SCRIPT(5) |
NAME¶
init-d-script —
interpreter for short and simple init.d scripts
DESCRIPTION¶
Generic init.d script framework to reduce the redundant code in /etc/init.d/. The goal is to create an init.d script that is Debian and LSB compliant. When the Debian policy conflicts with the LSB, the Debian policy takes precedence.
This is a simple example on how init-d-script can be used to start and stop a daemon with PID file support:
#!/usr/bin/env /lib/init/init-d-script ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: atd # Required-Start: $syslog $time $remote_fs # Required-Stop: $syslog $time $remote_fs # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 6 # Short-Description: run at jobs # Description: Debian init script to start the daemon # running at jobs. ### END INIT INFO DAEMON=/usr/sbin/atd
The following variables affect behaviour of an init script:
DAEMON- Path to daemon being started. If the init script is not supposed to start
any kind of daemon, the functions
do_start_override(),do_stop_override() anddo_status_override() should be defined instead. DAEMON_ARGS- Additional arguments, passed to daemon during start.
NAME- Additional environment variables are sources from
/etc/default/${NAME}. If unset, this variable
defaults to the basename of the
“
DAEMON” value. COMMAND_NAME- If this variable is set, it is used as argument to the
--nameoption of start-stop-daemon(8). It may be useful if the value of theNAMEvariable is too long. PIDFILE- Path to file where the process identifier of the started daemon will be
stored during start. If the value is verbatim
“
none”, the process identifier will not be stored in any file. If this variable is not set, it gets a sensible default value, so it is rarely necessary to set this variable explicitly.
Additionally, it is possible to change the
behaviour of the resulting shell script by overriding some of the internal
functions. To do so, define function with an
_override suffix. So, for example, to override the
do_status()
function, one should define a
do_status_override()
function. The
exception
to this rule is the do_reload() function, whose
override should be defined as-is,
without
the above-mentioned suffix.
Here is a control flow chart that explains what functions are called and when:
/etc/init.d/script start
do_start
do_start_prepare # no-op
do_start_cmd # start-stop-daemon is called here
do_start_cleanup # no-op
/etc/init.d/script stop
do_stop
do_stop_prepare # no-op
do_stop_cmd # start-stop-daemon is called here
do_stop_cleanup # no-op
/etc/init.d/script status
do_status
/etc/init.d/script reload
do_reload
do_usage
exit 3
/etc/init.d/script force-reload
do_force_reload
do_reload # if overridden
do_restart
do_restart_prepare
do_stop_cmd
do_start_cmd
do_restart_cleanup
/etc/init.d/script restart
do_force_restart
/etc/init.d/script try-restart
if do_status; then
do_restart
do_restart_prepare
do_stop_cmd # start-stop-daemon is called here
do_start_cmd # start-stop-daemon is called here
do_restart_cleanup
/etc/init.d/script <arg>
do_unknown <arg>
exit 3
/etc/init.d/script
do_usage
As can be seen, by default, the script does not
support the reload action; it should be implemented
by the script writer by defining a
do_reload()
function.
If the daemon performs reload action upon receiving a
SIGUSR1 signal, a generic implementation can be used
with the following code:
alias do_reload=do_reload_sigusr1
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHORS¶
Petter Reinholdtsen ⟨pere@debian.org⟩
| August 5, 2019 | Debian |