NAME¶
init, telinit - process control initialization
SYNOPSIS¶
/sbin/init [
-a ] [
-s ] [
-b ] [
-z
xxx ] [
0123456Ss ]
/sbin/telinit [
-t SECONDS ] [
0123456sSQqabcUu ]
/sbin/telinit [
-e VAR[
=VAL] ]
DESCRIPTION¶
Init¶
Init is the parent of all processes. Its primary role is to create
processes from a script stored in the file
/etc/inittab (see
inittab(5)). This file usually has entries which cause
init to
spawn
gettys on each line that users can log in. It also controls
autonomous processes required by any particular system.
RUNLEVELS¶
A
runlevel is a software configuration of the system which allows only a
selected group of processes to exist. The processes spawned by
init for
each of these runlevels are defined in the
/etc/inittab file.
Init can be in one of eight runlevels:
0–6 and
S
(a.k.a.
s). The runlevel is changed by having a privileged user run
telinit, which sends appropriate signals to
init, telling it
which runlevel to change to.
Runlevels
S,
0,
1, and
6 are reserved. Runlevel S is
used to initialize the system on boot. When starting runlevel S (on boot) or
runlevel 1 (switching from a multi-user runlevel) the system is entering
``single-user mode'', after which the current runlevel is S. Runlevel 0 is
used to halt the system; runlevel 6 is used to reboot the system.
After booting through S the system automatically enters one of the multi-user
runlevels 2 through 5, unless there was some problem that needs to be fixed by
the administrator in single-user mode. Normally after entering single-user
mode the administrator performs maintenance and then reboots the system.
For more information, see the manpages for
shutdown(8) and
inittab(5).
Runlevels 7-9 are also valid, though not really documented. This is because
"traditional" Unix variants don't use them.
Runlevels
S and
s are the same. Internally they are aliases for
the same runlevel.
BOOTING¶
After
init is invoked as the last step of the kernel boot sequence, it
looks for the file
/etc/inittab to see if there is an entry of the type
initdefault (see
inittab(5)). The
initdefault entry
determines the initial runlevel of the system. If there is no such entry (or
no
/etc/inittab at all), a runlevel must be entered at the system
console.
Runlevel
S or
s initialize the system and do not require an
/etc/inittab file.
In single user mode,
/sbin/sulogin is invoked on
/dev/console.
When entering single user mode,
init initializes the consoles
stty
settings to sane values. Clocal mode is set. Hardware speed and handshaking
are not changed.
When entering a multi-user mode for the first time,
init performs the
boot and
bootwait entries to allow file systems to be mounted
before users can log in. Then all entries matching the runlevel are processed.
When starting a new process,
init first checks whether the file
/etc/initscript exists. If it does, it uses this script to start the
process.
Each time a child terminates,
init records the fact and the reason it
died in
/var/run/utmp and
/var/log/wtmp, provided that these
files exist.
CHANGING RUNLEVELS¶
After it has spawned all of the processes specified,
init waits for one
of its descendant processes to die, a powerfail signal, or until it is
signaled by
telinit to change the system's runlevel. When one of the
above three conditions occurs, it re-examines the
/etc/inittab file.
New entries can be added to this file at any time. However,
init still
waits for one of the above three conditions to occur. To provide for an
instantaneous response, the
telinit Q or
q command can wake up
init to re-examine the
/etc/inittab file.
If
init is not in single user mode and receives a powerfail signal
(SIGPWR), it reads the file
/etc/powerstatus. It then starts a command
based on the contents of this file:
- F(AIL)
- Power is failing, UPS is providing the power. Execute the
powerwait and powerfail entries.
- O(K)
- The power has been restored, execute the powerokwait
entries.
- L(OW)
- The power is failing and the UPS has a low battery. Execute
the powerfailnow entries.
If /etc/powerstatus doesn't exist or contains anything else then the letters
F,
O or
L, init will behave as if it has read the letter
F.
Usage of
SIGPWR and
/etc/powerstatus is discouraged. Someone
wanting to interact with
init should use the
/run/initctl
control channel - see the source code of the
sysvinit package for more
documentation about this.
When
init is requested to change the runlevel, it sends the warning
signal
SIGTERM to all processes that are undefined in the new runlevel.
It then waits 5 seconds before forcibly terminating these processes via the
SIGKILL signal. Note that
init assumes that all these processes
(and their descendants) remain in the same process group which
init
originally created for them. If any process changes its process group
affiliation it will not receive these signals. Such processes need to be
terminated separately.
TELINIT¶
/sbin/telinit is linked to
/sbin/init. It takes a one-character
argument and signals
init to perform the appropriate action. The
following arguments serve as directives to
telinit:
- 0,1,2,3,4,5 or
6
- tell init to switch to the specified run level.
- a,b,c
- tell init to process only those /etc/inittab
file entries having runlevel a,b or c.
- Q or q
- tell init to re-examine the /etc/inittab
file.
- S or s
- tell init to switch to single user mode.
- U or u
- tell init to re-execute itself (preserving the
state). No re-examining of /etc/inittab file happens. Run level
should be one of Ss0123456 otherwise request would be silently
ignored.
telinit can tell
init how long it should wait between sending
processes the SIGTERM and SIGKILL signals. The default is 5 seconds, but this
can be changed with the
-t option.
telinit -e tells
init to change the environment for processes it
spawns. The argument of
-e is either of the form
VAR=
VAL
which sets variable
VAR to value
VAL, or of the form
VAR
(without an equality sign) which unsets variable
VAR.
telinit can be invoked only by users with appropriate privileges.
The
init binary checks if it is
init or
telinit by looking
at its
process id; the real
init's process id is always
1. From this it follows that instead of calling
telinit one can
also just use
init instead as a shortcut.
ENVIRONMENT¶
Init sets the following environment variables for all its children:
- PATH
- /bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin
- INIT_VERSION
- As the name says. Useful to determine if a script runs
directly from init.
- RUNLEVEL
- The current system runlevel.
- PREVLEVEL
- The previous runlevel (useful after a runlevel
switch).
- CONSOLE
- The system console. This is really inherited from the
kernel; however if it is not set init will set it to
/dev/console by default.
BOOTFLAGS¶
It is possible to pass a number of flags to
init from the boot monitor
(eg. LILO).
Init accepts the following flags:
- -s, S, single
- Single user mode boot. In this mode /etc/inittab is
examined and the bootup rc scripts are usually run before the single user
mode shell is started.
- 1-5
- Runlevel to boot into.
- -b, emergency
- Boot directly into a single user shell without running any
other startup scripts.
- -a, auto
- The LILO boot loader adds the word "auto" to the
command line if it booted the kernel with the default command line
(without user intervention). If this is found init sets the
"AUTOBOOT" environment variable to "yes". Note that
you cannot use this for any security measures - of course the user could
specify "auto" or -a on the command line manually.
- -z xxx
- The argument to -z is ignored. You can use this to
expand the command line a bit, so that it takes some more space on the
stack. Init can then manipulate the command line so that
ps(1) shows the current runlevel.
INTERFACE¶
Init listens on a
fifo in /run,
/run/initctl, for messages.
Telinit uses this to communicate with init. The interface is not very
well documented or finished. Those interested should study the
initreq.h file in the
src/ subdirectory of the
init
source code tar archive.
SIGNALS¶
Init reacts to several signals:
- SIGHUP
- Has the same effect as telinit q.
- SIGUSR1
- On receipt of this signals, init closes and re-opens its
control fifo, /run/initctl.
- SIGINT
- Normally the kernel sends this signal to init when
CTRL-ALT-DEL is pressed. It activates the ctrlaltdel action.
- SIGWINCH
- The kernel sends this signal when the KeyboardSignal
key is hit. It activates the kbrequest action.
Init is compatible with the System V init. It works closely together with
the scripts in the directories
/etc/init.d and
/etc/rc{runlevel}.d. If your system uses this convention, there should
be a
README file in the directory
/etc/init.d explaining how
these scripts work.
FILES¶
/etc/inittab
/etc/initscript
/dev/console
/var/run/utmp
/var/log/wtmp
/run/initctl
WARNINGS¶
Init assumes that processes and descendants of processes remain in the
same process group which was originally created for them. If the processes
change their group,
init can't kill them and you may end up with two
processes reading from one terminal line.
On a Debian system, entering runlevel 1 causes all processes to be killed except
for kernel threads and the script that does the killing and other processes in
its session. As a consequence of this, it isn't safe to return from runlevel 1
to a multi-user runlevel: daemons that were started in runlevel S and are
needed for normal operation are no longer running. The system should be
rebooted.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
If
init finds that it is continuously respawning an entry more than 10
times in 2 minutes, it will assume that there is an error in the command
string, generate an error message on the system console, and refuse to respawn
this entry until either 5 minutes has elapsed or it receives a signal. This
prevents it from eating up system resources when someone makes a typographical
error in the
/etc/inittab file or the program for the entry is removed.
AUTHOR¶
Miquel van Smoorenburg (miquels@cistron.nl), initial manual page by Michael
Haardt (u31b3hs@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de).
SEE ALSO¶
getty(1),
login(1),
sh(1),
runlevel(8),
shutdown(8), kill(1),
inittab(5),
initscript(5),
utmp(5)