case they accidentally get created as directories or with flags that
prevent their removal. While I wouldn't normally go the extra mile
here and let the normal unix rules prevail, the effects of failure are
large enough that extra care is warranted.
up and can cause issues on boot with the prompts. Fix the read-only
root case with horrible kludge of mounting rw removing the files, then
mounting ro. But since that's no more horrible than the kludge of
using marker files in /. With this change, NanoBSD configs can safely
use /firstboot + growfs to produce minimal images that grow to the
size of the card.
service does not run in jails, it was necessary to change it to something
else when jailed, and NETWORKING was arbitrarily chosen. The divider was
later moved to FILESYSTEMS when it was introduced, but the logic to change
it to NETWORKING when jailed remained. Remove it, as it no longer serves
any purpose.
PR: 194975
MFC after: 1 week
improve boot performance; this produces arguably astonishing (non-)results
if /etc/rc.conf is modified during the boot process.
Since performance considerations make it infeasible to automatically detect
if the cached /etc/rc.conf parameters should be invalidated, provide a
mechanism for explicitly requesting that /etc/rc.conf be reloaded: Catch
SIGALRM and reload /etc/rc.conf if it is received.
Discussed on: freebsd-rc
MFC after: 3 days
These scripts, containing
# KEYWORD: firstboot
will only be run if a sentinel file (default: /firstboot, configurable
via the rc.conf ${firstboot_sentinel} variable) exists; this sentinel
file will be deleted at the end of the boot process.
Scripts can request that the system reboot after the first boot by
creating the file ${firstboot_sentinel}-reboot.
This functionality is expected to be useful for embedded systems and
virtual machine images, where it may be desirable to
(a) download and install updates which became available between when
the image was created and when it was "turned on";
(b) download and install packages which may be newer than those
which were available when the image was created;
(c) install packages which run binaries during their install process,
bypassing the problem of cross-architecture installs;
(d) resize filesystems to match the disk onto which a VM image was
installed;
(e) perform initialization tasks relevant to cloud systems (e.g.,
Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud);
and likely to perform many other one-time initialization functions.
Document this new functionality in rc.conf(5) and rc(8). [2]
Reviewed by: freebsd-current, freebsd-rc [1]
Reviewed by: Warren Block [2]
MFC after: 3 days
apply to most jails but do apply to vnet jails. This includes adding
a new sysctl "security.jail.vnet" to identify vnet jails.
PR: conf/149050
Submitted by: mdodd
MFC after: 3 days
If rc(8) is executed without using a TTY, this error appears at the
beginning:
stty: stdin isn't a terminal
Because this is to be expected and of course not harmful, it is better
to simply hide the error message.
MFC after: 1 week
early_late_divider in the second run (and thus be skipped altogether),
keep a list of the scripts run early, and use that list to skip things
in the second run.
This has the primary benefit of not skipping a local script that gets
ordered too early in the second run. It also gives an opportunity to
clean up/simplify the code a bit.
Use a space-separated list rather than the more traditional colon for
maximum insurance against creativity in local naming conventions.
Reviewed by: brooks
out because the rc.conf(5) variable was not enabled. Display a
message that the command wasn't run and offer suggestions on
what the user can do.
Implement a quiet prefix, which will disable some diagnostics. The
fast prefix also implies quiet. During boot we use either fast or
quiet. For shutdown we already use 'faststop'. So, this informational
message should only appear during interactive use.
An additional benefit of having a quiet prefix is that we can start
putting some of our diagnostic messages behind this knob and start
"de-cluttering" the console during boot and shutdown.
and takes over mountcritlocal's role as the early / late divider. This
makes it far easier to add rc scripts which need to run early, such as a
startup script for zfs, which is right around the corner.
This change should be a no-op; I have verified that the only change in
rcorder's output is the insertion of FILESYSTEMS immediately after
mountcritlocal.
MFC after: 3 weeks
as part of rc. Doing this, and the sourcing of rc.subr after we have
determined if we are booting diskless (and correspondingly run
rc.initdiskless if necessary) are safe, and actually allow fewer files
to be needed on the diskless box. This also allows variables from
the configuration to be available to rc itself, such as ...
Add a variable to rc.conf, early_late_divider, which designates the
script which separates the early and late stages of the boot process.
Default this to mountcritlocal, and add text to etc/defaults/rc.conf,
rc.conf(5) and diskless(8) which describes how and why one might want
to change this.
Reviewed by: brooks
the base rcorder. This is accomplished by running rcorder twice,
first to get all the disks mounted (through mountcritremote),
then again to include the local_startup directories.
This dramatically changes the behavior of rc.d/localpkg, as
all "local" scripts that have the new rc.d semantics are now
run in the base rcorder, so only scripts that have not been
converted yet will run in rc.d/localpkg.
Make a similar change in rc.shutdown, and add some functions in
rc.subr to support these changes.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to reflect this change.
to run initdiskless before we run rcorder on /etc/rc.d. To allow this,
move /etc/rc.d/initdiskless to /etc/rc.initdiskless and run it directly
from /etc/rc.
Remove /etc/rc.d/preseedrandom as it is no longer necessicary (we start
with entropy unblocked) and was only used by initdiskless when it
was needed.
Discussed on: freebsd-rc
Repocopy by: peter
cannot or does not want to be executed in a jail the
KEYWORDS line should contain the nojail keyword.
o Update Copyright
# I suggest people who use jails more extensively than I do
# make commits to the appropriate files.
All functionality from the previous system has been preserved, and
users should still customize their system boot with the familiar
methods, rc.conf, rc.conf.local, rc.firewall, sysctl.conf, etc.
Users who have customized versions of scripts that have been removed
should take great care when upgrading, since the compatibility code
that used those old scripts has also been removed.
Instead, load them as part of the rc.d system. This allows us to prioritize
the initidiskless script so it runs before the configuration files are loaded
and allows us to get rid of the exit 2 hack in /etc/rc. The exit 2 never
worked anyway since it did not unset the prior configuration, causing the
diskless code to not operate properly.
Do a major cleanup and revamping of the diskless code for RCNG. This will
be backported to the non-RCNG scripts as well as -stable.
With suggestions from: Mike Makonnen <mtm@identd.net>
MFC after: 7 days
background fsck. The delay defaults to sixty seconds to allow
large applications such as the X server to start before disk I/O
bandwidth is monopolized by fsck.
Submitted by: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
a per-machine or per-cluster (with different ways of expressing what's
part of a cluster) basis. In order for this to be effective, rc.conf
has to be reread after initdiskless is finished. Implement this by
adding a hook to etc/rc which rereads rc.conf by request. This can
also be implemented by renaming initdiskless to initdiskless.sh and
sourcing rc.conf there manually, but it was decided that, that would
be uglier than a hook in etc/rc.
Developed in concert with: gordon
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
xntpd_* -> ntpd_*
portmap_* -> rpcbind_*
Also change single_mountd_enable to mountd_enable.
We also include shims for all the old variable names.
Submitted by: Mike Makonnen <makonnen@pacbell.net>
rm -f /tmp/.X11-unix/*
If /tmp/.X11-unix didn't already exist, a user could symlink it to a directory
with files that he wants to wipe out, and wait for next reboot.
Reported by: lumpy <lumpy@the.whole.net>
around. If the kernel boots successfully, the record of this kernel
is erased, it is intended to be a one-shot option for testing
kernels.
This could be improved by having the loader remove the record of
the next kernel to boot, it is currently removed in /etc/rc immediately
after disks are mounted r/w.
I'd like to MFC this before the 4.6 freeze unless there is violent
objection.
Reviewed by: Several on IRC
MFC after: 4 days
again."
As an alternative to sendmail_enable=NONE, solve the boot time problem
for non-sendmail users completely by moving all of the sendmail startup
code from /etc/rc to /etc/rc.sendmail. The source for that script will
be kept in src/etc/sendmail/rc.sendmail so make.conf's NO_SENDMAIL will
prevent it from being installed. A new rc.conf variable,
mta_start_script specifies the script to run to start the user's
preferred MTA. For backward compatibility, it will default to
/etc/rc.sendmail. The specified script is called out of /etc/rc after
checking to make sure it exists. A new rc.sendmail.8 man page has also
been added which now houses the sendmail_* variable descriptions
formerly in rc.conf.5.
Use /etc/rc.sendmail in /etc/mail/Makefile to reduce code duplication.
Reviewed by: -current, -stable, obrien, peter, ru
MFC after: 1 week
at boot time.
Instead of rc.conf's sendmail_enable only accepting YES or NO, it can now
also accept NONE. If set to NONE, none of the other sendmail related
startup items will be done.
Remove an extra queue running daemon might be started that wasn't necessary
(it didn't hurt anything but it wasn't needed).
The new logic is:
# MTA
if ${sendmail_enable} == NONE
# Do nothing
else if ${sendmail_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_flags}
else if ${sendmail_submit_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_submit_flags}
else if ${sendmail_outbound_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_outbound_flags}
endif
# MSP Queue Runner
if ${sendmail_enable} != NONE &&
[ -r /etc/mail/submit.cf] && ${sendmail_msp_queue_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_msp_queue_flags}
endif
Discussed with: Thomas Quinot <Thomas.Quinot@Cuivre.FR.EU.ORG>,
Christopher Schulte <schulte+freebsd@nospam.schulte.org>
MFC after: 1 week