1993-11-07 01:19:06 +00:00
|
|
|
#!/bin/sh
|
1996-01-28 08:08:37 +00:00
|
|
|
# $Id: rc,v 1.81 1996/01/16 08:04:06 graichen Exp $
|
1993-11-07 01:19:06 +00:00
|
|
|
# From: @(#)rc 5.27 (Berkeley) 6/5/91
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# System startup script run by init on autoboot
|
|
|
|
# or after single-user.
|
|
|
|
# Output and error are redirected to console by init,
|
|
|
|
# and the console is the controlling terminal.
|
|
|
|
|
1995-05-11 21:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
# Note that almost all the user-configurable behavior is no longer in
|
|
|
|
# this file, but rather in /etc/sysconfig. Please check this file
|
|
|
|
# first before contemplating any changes here.
|
|
|
|
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
stty status '^T'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Set shell to ignore SIGINT (2), but not children;
|
|
|
|
# shell catches SIGQUIT (3) and returns to single user after fsck.
|
|
|
|
trap : 2
|
|
|
|
trap : 3 # shouldn't be needed
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOME=/; export HOME
|
|
|
|
PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
|
|
|
|
export PATH
|
|
|
|
|
1994-10-25 08:23:02 +00:00
|
|
|
swapon -a
|
|
|
|
|
1994-08-21 04:28:44 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ $1x = autobootx ]
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
then
|
|
|
|
echo Automatic reboot in progress...
|
|
|
|
fsck -p
|
|
|
|
case $? in
|
|
|
|
0)
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
2)
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
4)
|
|
|
|
reboot
|
|
|
|
echo "reboot failed... help!"
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
8)
|
|
|
|
echo "Automatic file system check failed... help!"
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
12)
|
|
|
|
echo "Reboot interrupted"
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
130)
|
|
|
|
# interrupt before catcher installed
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
*)
|
|
|
|
echo "Unknown error in reboot"
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
esac
|
1994-08-21 04:28:44 +00:00
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
echo Skipping disk checks ...
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
trap "echo 'Reboot interrupted'; exit 1" 3
|
|
|
|
|
1994-09-23 18:02:22 +00:00
|
|
|
# root must be read/write both for NFS diskless and for VFS LKMs before
|
|
|
|
# proceeding any further.
|
|
|
|
mount -u -o rw /
|
1995-05-15 08:39:37 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ $? != 0 ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo "Filesystem mount failed, startup aborted"
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
fi
|
1994-06-06 17:45:37 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
umount -a >/dev/null 2>&1
|
1995-05-15 08:39:37 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
mount -a -t nonfs
|
1995-05-15 08:39:37 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ $? != 0 ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo "Filesystem mount failed, startup aborted"
|
|
|
|
exit 1
|
|
|
|
fi
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1993-12-17 04:20:30 +00:00
|
|
|
# If the machine runs wall CMOS clock (compatible with MSDOS),
|
|
|
|
# activate following line by creating empty file /etc/wall_cmos_clock
|
|
|
|
# If this file not exist, following line does nothing (assumed
|
|
|
|
# the machine runs UTC CMOS clock). See adjkerntz(8) for details.
|
1994-11-02 09:43:38 +00:00
|
|
|
adjkerntz -i
|
1993-12-17 04:20:30 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1995-03-21 15:20:48 +00:00
|
|
|
# If there is a global system configuration file, suck it in.
|
|
|
|
if [ -f /etc/sysconfig ]; then
|
|
|
|
. /etc/sysconfig
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
1994-06-04 00:44:00 +00:00
|
|
|
# configure serial devices
|
1995-03-21 15:20:48 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ -f /etc/rc.serial ]; then
|
1995-03-24 00:01:21 +00:00
|
|
|
. /etc/rc.serial
|
1994-06-04 00:44:00 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# start up the network
|
1995-03-29 03:42:21 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ -f /etc/netstart ]; then
|
1995-04-11 01:22:24 +00:00
|
|
|
sh /etc/netstart
|
1995-03-29 03:42:21 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
1995-05-15 19:50:59 +00:00
|
|
|
mount -a -t nfs >/dev/null 2>&1
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Whack the pty perms back into shape.
|
|
|
|
chmod 666 /dev/tty[pqrs]*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# clean up left-over files
|
|
|
|
rm -f /etc/nologin
|
|
|
|
rm -f /var/spool/lock/*
|
1995-04-11 18:36:10 +00:00
|
|
|
rm -rf /var/spool/uucp/.Temp/*
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
rm -f /dev/log
|
|
|
|
(cd /var/run && { rm -rf -- *; cp /dev/null utmp; chmod 644 utmp; })
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
echo clearing /tmp
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# prune quickly with one rm, then use find to clean up /tmp/[lq]*
|
|
|
|
# (not needed with mfs /tmp, but doesn't hurt there...)
|
|
|
|
(cd /tmp && rm -rf [a-km-pr-zA-Z]* &&
|
|
|
|
find -d . ! -name . ! -name lost+found ! -name quotas -exec rm -rf -- {} \;)
|
|
|
|
|
1995-06-25 04:01:32 +00:00
|
|
|
# enable dumpdev so that savecore can see it
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${dumpdev}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
dumpon ${dumpdev}
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# /var/crash should be a directory or a symbolic link
|
|
|
|
# to the crash directory if core dumps are to be saved.
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${savecore}" = X"YES" -a -d /var/crash ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n checking for core dump...
|
|
|
|
savecore /var/crash
|
1995-03-16 16:58:01 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# snapshot any kernel -c changes back to disk
|
|
|
|
echo 'recording kernel -c changes'
|
|
|
|
/sbin/dset -q
|
1994-01-08 17:49:47 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# Check the quotas
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${check_quotas}" = X"YES" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo 'checking quotas:'
|
|
|
|
quotacheck -a
|
|
|
|
echo ' done.'
|
|
|
|
quotaon -a
|
1994-02-21 03:16:43 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# start system logging and name service (named needs to start before syslogd
|
|
|
|
# if you don't have a /etc/resolv.conf)
|
|
|
|
#
|
|
|
|
echo -n starting system daemons:
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1995-04-09 09:54:51 +00:00
|
|
|
echo ' syslogd.'; syslogd
|
1995-03-21 15:20:48 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n starting network daemons:
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# $namedflags is imported from /etc/sysconfig
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${namedflags}" != "XNO" ]; then
|
1995-04-09 09:54:51 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' named'; named $namedflags
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# $ntpdate and $xntpdflags are imported from /etc/sysconfig.
|
|
|
|
# If $ntpdate != NO, run ntpdate $ntpdate to set the date correctly.
|
|
|
|
# If $xntpdflags != NO, start xntpd.
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${ntpdate}" != X"NO" -o "X${xntpdflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${tickadjflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' tickadj'; tickadj ${tickadjflags--Aq}
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${ntpdate}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' ntpdate'; ntpdate ${ntpdate} >/dev/null 2>&1
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${xntpdflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' xntpd'; xntpd ${xntpdflags}
|
|
|
|
fi
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# $timedflags is imported from /etc/sysconfig;
|
|
|
|
# if $timedflags == NO, timed isn't run.
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${timedflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' timed'; timed $timedflags
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# Portmapper should always be run, to provide RPC services for inetd.
|
|
|
|
if [ -x /usr/sbin/portmap ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' portmap'; portmap
|
1995-03-30 00:01:09 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# Start ypserv if we're an NIS server.
|
|
|
|
# Run yppasswdd only on the NIS master server
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${nis_serverflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
1995-04-09 09:54:51 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' ypserv'; ypserv ${nis_serverflags}
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "X${yppasswddflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
1995-04-09 09:54:51 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' yppasswdd'; yppasswdd ${yppasswddflags}
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# Start ypbind if we're an NIS client
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${nis_clientflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
1995-04-09 09:54:51 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' ypbind'; ypbind ${nis_clientflags}
|
1995-07-20 16:26:26 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "X${nis_ypsetflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' ypset'; ypset ${nis_ypsetflags}
|
|
|
|
fi
|
1995-03-21 15:20:48 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# $rwhod is imported from /etc/sysconfig;
|
|
|
|
# if $rwhod is set to YES, rwhod is run.
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${rwhod}" = X"YES" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' rwhod'; rwhod
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "X${nfs_server}" = X"YES" -a -r /etc/exports ]; then
|
1995-09-14 02:44:49 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' mountd'
|
1995-12-28 01:24:04 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "X${weak_mountd_authentication}" = X"YES" ]; then
|
1995-09-14 02:44:49 +00:00
|
|
|
mountd -n
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
mountd
|
|
|
|
fi
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' nfsd'; nfsd -u -t 4
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "X${nfs_client}" = X"YES" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' nfsiod'; nfsiod -n 4
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "X${amdflags}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
1996-01-16 08:04:06 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' amd'
|
|
|
|
amd -p -l /var/log/amd.log ${amdflags} > /var/run/amd.pid
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# Kerberos runs ONLY on the Kerberos server machine
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${kerberos_server}" = X"YES" ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' kerberos'; kerberos >> /var/log/kerberos.log &
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' kadmind'; \
|
1995-11-04 05:03:16 +00:00
|
|
|
(sleep 20; kadmind -n >/dev/null 2>&1 &) &
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' inetd'; inetd
|
|
|
|
echo '.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# build ps databases
|
|
|
|
kvm_mkdb
|
|
|
|
dev_mkdb
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# check the password temp/lock file
|
|
|
|
if [ -f /etc/ptmp ]
|
|
|
|
then
|
|
|
|
logger -s -p auth.err \
|
|
|
|
"password file may be incorrect -- /etc/ptmp exists"
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Recover vi editor files.
|
1995-10-29 12:43:47 +00:00
|
|
|
virecovery=`echo /var/tmp/vi.recover/recover.*`
|
1995-10-28 23:32:26 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ "$virecovery" != '/var/tmp/vi.recover/recover.*' ]; then
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
echo 'Recovering vi editor sessions'
|
|
|
|
for i in $virecovery; do
|
|
|
|
sendmail -t < $i
|
|
|
|
done
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${accounting}" = X"YES" -a -d /var/account ]; then
|
1995-11-01 00:22:45 +00:00
|
|
|
echo 'turning on accounting'
|
|
|
|
if [ ! -e /var/account/acct ]; then
|
|
|
|
touch /var/account/acct
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
accton /var/account/acct
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Now start up miscellaneous daemons that don't belong anywhere else
|
|
|
|
#
|
|
|
|
echo -n standard daemons:
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' cron'; cron
|
1996-01-28 08:08:37 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${lpd}" != X"NO" -a -x /usr/sbin/lpd ]; then
|
|
|
|
echo -n ' printer'; lpd
|
|
|
|
fi
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# $sendmail_flags is imported from /etc/sysconfig;
|
|
|
|
# if $sendmail_flags is something other than NO, sendmail is run.
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${sendmail_flags}" != X"NO" -a -r /etc/sendmail.cf ]; then
|
1995-12-09 19:40:12 +00:00
|
|
|
echo -n ' sendmail'; /usr/sbin/sendmail ${sendmail_flags}
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
echo '.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Make shared lib searching a little faster. Leave /usr/lib first if you
|
|
|
|
# add your own entries or you may come to grief.
|
|
|
|
if [ -x /sbin/ldconfig ]; then
|
|
|
|
_LDC=/usr/lib
|
|
|
|
if [ -d /usr/X11R6/lib ]; then _LDC="${_LDC} /usr/X11R6/lib" ; fi
|
|
|
|
if [ -d /usr/X386/lib ]; then _LDC="${_LDC} /usr/X386/lib" ; fi
|
|
|
|
if [ -d /usr/local/lib ]; then _LDC="${_LDC} /usr/local/lib" ; fi
|
|
|
|
echo 'setting ldconfig path:' ${_LDC}
|
|
|
|
ldconfig ${_LDC}
|
|
|
|
fi
|
1995-03-22 03:29:55 +00:00
|
|
|
|
This is the rc work as provided by pts, I will me makeing some additional
changes to it based upon other outstanding bug reports and commits made
after his work.
Comments:
(a) sysconfig is still used to do all configuration. I was not going to
change that out from under you.... a user never need edit netstart
or rc* unless they're being very weird.
(b) rc.maint has been folded back into rc. It is just unworkable as
a separate chunk because of ordering bogosities
(c) netstart does what it says... it starts up enough of the network to
get up, it doesn't start every bloody daemon that might talk to a
socket... netstart ifconfig's the devices and sets up routing if
configured to do so.
(d) nfs disks are mounted immediately after netstart completes
(e) syslog is started as early as possible (right after nfs) so that error
messages can get logged to remote syslog servers properly
(f) named is started (there is an argument that says that named should be
started before syslogd because if you are the dns server for your domain,
you'd like named to resolve remote hosts in syslog.conf, but this is
a minority case and the trivial workarround is to put the syslog host
in /etc/hosts or use an /etc/resolv.conf -- why? because you want syslog
to catch named errors, which is a MUCH more important and likely occurance)
(g) NOW all of the rest of the network daemons such as the time stuff, RPC,
NIS, NFS, Kerberos and inetd are started
(h) the rest of the generic stuff is done (cron/printer/sendmail)
(i) shared libraries are set
(j) /etc/rc.i386 is run (this does FreeBSD/386 specific stuff like ibcs2,
xtend, and all of the syscons stuff
(this is actually started as /etc/rc.`uname -m`
(k) the syscons stuff has gotten a serious cleaning to make it consistent
with rc conventions
(l) rc.local has had the comments about syscons removed (they are not relevant
to this file now) and the full name of the kernel has been restored to
/etc/motd
Submitted by: pts
1995-03-30 06:26:19 +00:00
|
|
|
# configure implementation specific stuff
|
|
|
|
arch=`uname -m`
|
1995-09-19 08:33:43 +00:00
|
|
|
if [ -f /etc/rc.${arch} ]; then
|
|
|
|
. /etc/rc.${arch}
|
1995-03-24 00:16:26 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
1995-12-28 01:24:04 +00:00
|
|
|
# for each valid dir in $local_startup, search for init scripts matching *.sh
|
|
|
|
if [ "X${local_startup}" != X"NO" ]; then
|
|
|
|
for dir in ${local_startup}; do
|
|
|
|
[ -d ${dir} ] && for script in ${dir}/*.sh; do
|
|
|
|
[ -x ${script} ] && ${script} start
|
|
|
|
done
|
1995-09-18 07:38:18 +00:00
|
|
|
done
|
1995-03-23 01:25:19 +00:00
|
|
|
fi
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1995-09-18 07:38:18 +00:00
|
|
|
# Do traditional (but rather obsolete) rc.local file if it exists.
|
1995-09-19 10:19:44 +00:00
|
|
|
[ -f /etc/rc.local ] && sh /etc/rc.local
|
1995-09-18 07:38:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
1993-06-20 13:41:45 +00:00
|
|
|
date
|
|
|
|
exit 0
|