NAME¶
uservd —
supply user services
SYNOPSIS¶
DESCRIPTION¶
uservd is the daemon called by
userv to have
a task performed under different userid while maintaining limited trust
between caller and callee.
OPTIONS¶
There is one optional argument:
- -daemon
- Requests that the program daemonise. If this flag is
supplied, uservd will fork and completely detach from
the controlling terminal. If this option is not supplied,
uservd will remain in its starting process group and
continue to use the supplied stderr stream for any runtime system
messages; this is useful for running uservd as a child
of init. Errors detected by uservd
itself will be reported via syslog in either case.
SYSLOG MESSAGES:¶
uservd issues diagnostics of various kinds to syslog, with
facility
LOG_DAEMON. The syslog levels used are:
- debug
- Verbose messages about the activity of the userv
daemon.
- info
- Two log messages about the nature and outcome of each
request.
- notice
- Messages about the status of the daemon, including the
startup message and the hourly socket check messages.
- warning
- If the uservd exits because it believes that it no longer
controls the rendezvous socket (ie, its socket has become orphaned), this
level will receive messages indicating why the daemon believes this and
notifying of its shutdown.
- err
- A believed-recoverable error condition was detected by the
userv server in itself, the client or the operating system (this includes
resource shortages). The uservd will try to continue.
- crit
- The uservd detected a non-recoverable error condition after
startup and will exit.
- alert
- not used.
- emerg
- not used.
The service configuration language has the facility to direct error and warning
messages to syslog. The default facility and level is
user.err, but the author of the configuration file(s) can
override this.
EXIT STATUS¶
The daemon's exit code will reflect how well things went:
- 0
- The daemon was asked to detach itself from the controlling
terminal and this appears to have been done successfully.
- 1*
- The daemon got a SIGTERM or SIGINT and shut itself
down.
- 2*
- The daemon believed that it was no longer the uservd and so
exited to clean up.
- 3
- uservd was started with incorrect arguments.
- 4
- A system call failure or other environmental problem
occurred during startup.
- 5*
- There was a non-recoverable error after startup; the uservd
had to exit.
- 6
- The daemon was asked to detach itself, but its detaching
child died for some unexpected reason.
- SIGABRT/SIGIOT*
- An unexpected internal error, usually caused by a bug in
uservd. This can also occur if an attempt to block signals using
sigprocmask fails.
Outcomes marked * are not possible if the daemon is asked to detach itself -
these exit statuses will be reaped by init instead and so will not usually be
logged anywhere.
The daemon's per-request children will report the success or otherwise of its
request in their exit status. These are not usually be logged unless they
indicate a serious problem.
ENVIRONMENT¶
All of the environment variables passed to
uservd will be
inherited by services as part of the default environment. (If the
set-environment configuration directive is used, then other
system configuration files can modify the environment. Consult the
specification.)
SEE ALSO¶
userv(1) init(8)
Ian Jackson, User
service daemon and client specification.
COPYRIGHT¶
GNU userv, including this manpage, is Copyright (C)1996-2003,2006 Ian Jackson,
except that the
userv(1) manpage is Copyright (C)2000 Ben
Harris and Copyright (C)2003 Ian Jackson.
GNU userv is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence, version
2 or (at your option) any later version, and it comes with NO WARRANTY, not
even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
userv, if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite
330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
HISTORY¶
uservd was initially written in 1996 by Ian Jackson. It became
GNU
uservd in 1999, and version 1.0 was released in
2000.