Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lars Engels
6c1a5e837d - Add descriptions to most of the rc scripts. Those are mostly taken from their
daemon's manpage and probably improved.
- Consistently use "filesystem" not "file system".

Approved by:	bapt, brueffer
Differential Revision:	D452
2016-04-23 16:10:54 +00:00
Enji Cooper
fb61cc1e64 Unbreak rcorder when MK_UTX == no by moving utx from REQUIRE: in LOGIN to
BEFORE: in utx

MFC after: 1 week
2015-02-13 20:52:23 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
8801556beb Simply things so that "#REQUIRE: FILESYSTEMS" means the file
systems are fully "ready to go".

'FILESYSTEMS' states: "This is a dummy dependency, for services which
require file systems to be mounted before starting."  However, we have
'var' which is was run after 'FILESYSTEMS' and can mount /var if it
already isn't mounted.  Furthermore, several scripts cannot use /var
until 'cleanvar' has done its thing.  Thus "FILESYSTEMS" hasn't really
meant all critical file systems are fully usable.
2012-09-11 05:04:59 +00:00
Ed Schouten
18568efd19 Avoid using BEFORE in the utx rc script.
Requested by:	dougb
2012-02-12 07:45:48 +00:00
Ed Schouten
c21ae3a403 Move utmpx handling out of init(8).
This has the following advantages:

- During boot, the BOOT_TIME record is now written right after the file
  systems become writable, but before users are allowed to log in. This
  means that they can't cause `hidden logins' by logging in right before
  init(8) kicks in.

- The pututxline(3) function may potentially block on file locking,
  though this is very rare to occur. By placing it in an rc script, the
  user can still kill it with ^C if needed.

- Most importantly: jails don't use init(8). This means that a force
  reboot of a system running jails will leave stale entries in the
  accounting database of the jails individually.
2012-02-11 20:47:16 +00:00