- Use _prestart rc.d method to automatically kldload ng_btsocket(4) if needed;
- Rename "sdpd_user" to "sdpd_username" and "sdpd_group" to "sdpd_groupname"
to avoid collision with "magic" variables;
Inspired by: yar
MFC after: 3 days
- Have both scripts automatically kldload ng_btsocket(4). I did not want to
do it, but its easier for users and it seems other scripts do similar things;
- Assign few variables after load_rc_config, so the /etc/rc.conf overrides
actually work;
MFC after: 1 week
more IPv4 address from a ranged list in CIRD notation:
ipv4_addrs_ed0="192.168.0.1/24 192.168.1.1-5/28"
In the process move alias processing into new ipv4_up/down functions to
more toward a less IPv4 centric world.
Submitted by: Philipp Wuensche <cryx dash freebsd at h3q dot com>
Introduce /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script to start/stop Bluetooth devices. It
will be called from devd(8) in response to device arrival/departure events.
It is also possible to call it by hand to start/stop particular device
without unplugging it.
Introduce generic way to set configuration parameters for Bluetooth devices.
By default /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script has hardwired defaults compatible
with old rc.bluetooth from /usr/share/netgraph/bluetooth/examples. These
can be overridden using /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file (system
wide defaults). Finally, there could be another device specific override
file located in /etc/bluetooth/$device.conf (where $device is ubt0, btccc0
etc.)
The list of configuration parameters and their meaning described in the
/etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file. Even though Bluetooth device
configuration files are not shell scripts, they must follow basic sh(1) syntax.
The bluetooth.device.conf(5) and handbook update will follow shortly.
Inspired by: Panagiotis Astithas ( past at ebs dot gr )
Reviewed by: brooks, yar
MFC after: 1 week
> > There is no need to explicitly add "status" to $extra_commands in
> > the /etc/rc.d/pf script as it is implicitly added by /etc/rc.subr's
> > run_rc_command() because of the existing $pf_program.
> >
> > Submitted by: Christoph Schug <chris@schug.net>
...because as yar@ points out: "[...] you were relying on evil
side-effects of the variable being named *_program. hose side-effect
have been eliminated since rc.subr rev. 1.42. [...] The point is that
the default "status" method is for rc.d scripts that handle startup and
shutdown of conventional daemons, and not for custom tasks like the pf
case."
The change is still valid in RELENG_6 (and still doesn't have to be
backed out) as long as rc.subr:r1.42 is not MFC'ed to RELENG_6, too.
the /etc/rc.d/pf script as it is implicitly added by /etc/rc.subr's
run_rc_command() because of the existing $pf_program.
Submitted by: Christoph Schug <chris@schug.net>
MFC after: 1 week
The rcorder(8) condition PROVIDE'd by the script
and REQUIRE'd by the others becomes "ppp".
The ultimate goal of the transformation is to reduce
confusion resulting from the fact that $name has been
"ppp" already.
Discussed with: pjd, -rc
/etc/defaults/rc.conf will provide foo_program, too.
By specifying "command" we explicitly say that we're
going to rely on rc.subr(8) default methods, and
rc.subr(8) will take advantage of this soon.
The majority of our rc.d scripts already set "command"
if appropriate, so fix just the non-compliant handful.
/etc/defaults/rc.conf. Both daemons can run even if no Bluetooth devices
are attached to the system. Both daemons depend on Bluetooth socket layer
and thus disabled by default. Bluetooth sockets layer must be either loaded
as a module or compiled into kernel before the daemons can run.
MFC after: 1 month
Start before routing for better system protection.
(pf used to start late during system boot, after
many a network daemon have started already, which
sucked from security POV.)
Remark: For maximum security, pf should start before
netif, but it would create a dependency loop because
pfsync has to start after netif, yet before pf.
Discussed with: mlaier on -pf
MFC after: 5 days
system boot, and hook it up in the system.
The separate script is needed because in the presence of various
interface lists in rc.conf ($network_interfaces, $cloned_interfaces,
$sppp_interfaces, $gif_interfaces, more to come) it is hard to start
them orderly, so that pfsync is brought up after its syncdev, which
is required for the proper startup of pfsync.
Discussed with: mlaier on -pf
MFC after: 5 days
- utilize default methods instead of rolling local ones;
- avoid to specify BEFORE conditions we don't really need
(pflog will be REQUIRE'd by pf);
- omit extra decoration from warning messages, warn() will
decorate them sufficiently.
override the value of mountd_args. This fixes the problem
where mountd_args was not properly being set if
weak_mountd_authentifcation="YES" was set in rc.conf.
PR: conf/86260
Submitted by: Thierry Herbelot <thierry at herbelot dot com>
MFC after: 3 days
rc.d/geli - configures encryption (ask for passphrases, etc.);
rc.d/geli2 - is called after file systems are mounted and mark devices for
detach on last close.
Sponsored by: Wheel Sp. z o.o.
http://www.wheel.pl
MFC after: 3 days
We're checking for /var/run/jail_<name>.id file and if it exists, we don't
start the jail. It should be also safe in case of reboot(8), because
rc.d/cleanvar script is going to remove /var/run/jail_* files.
It helps to avoid potential mess when the same jail is started twice,
because of an administrator mistake (been there, done that).
MFC after: 1 week
them. Just try to run the given command on them. We need to be able to
run stop functions on interfaces that have been deleted to stop
wpa_supplicant.
Approved by: re (interface startup blanket)
for kldstat to ever print "IP Filter" (the module is called "ipfilter"
and modules don't have anything like a description), so this function
would always return false. That would cause prestart to attempt to
load the module even if it's already loaded, which would fail and
prevent the rules from being loaded.
Approved by: re (dwhite)
way interfaces are configured. Some key points:
- At startup, all interfaces are configured through /etc/rc.d/netif.
- ifconfig_<if> variables my now mix real ifconfig commands the with
DHCP and WPA directives. For example, this allows media
configuration prior to running dhclient.
- /etc/rc.d/dhclient is not run at startup except by netif to start
dhclient on specific interfaces.
- /etc/pccard_ether calls "/etc/rc.d/netif start <if>" to do most of
it's work.
- /etc/pccard_ether no longer takes additional arguments to pass to
ifconfig. Instead, ifconfig_<if> variables are now honored in favor
of pccard_ifconfig when available.
- /etc/pccard_ether will only run on interfaces specified in
removable_interfaces, even if pccard_ifconfig is set.
because new devfs entries can show up later and one can access such entires
from inside named chroot.
In rc.d scripts we can use devfs_domount() function with devfsrules_hide_all
policy and unhide 'null' and 'random' manually.
to see if a prior devfs has been mounted. If no devfs is mounted on
${jail_devdir}/dev then proceed. This will prevent the stack up of
multiple devfs mounts on the same mount point.
Discussed with: pjd
MFC after: 1 week
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
Without this flag, if the symlink existed already a new symlink would
be created in the source directory. While harmless if the two symlinks
were the same, it nonetheless caused pointless confusion.
The pathological case is that when there is an existing /etc/namedb
symlink, but named_chrootdir in rc.conf pointed to a different
directory, it was the symlink in /var/named that was getting
updated, not the one in /etc. This led to some difficult to diagnose
problems for users.
sockets placed into prisons from the host environment get clobbered
by the prison's instance of cleanvar. (assuming /etc/rc is run in
the prison).
Discussed with: pjd, green, cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
save file was /var/db/entropy, which also happens to
be the directory where the individual entropy files
created by /usr/libexec/save-entropy are stored.
Change the suggestion to be /var/db/entropy-file
instead.
In an error condition where the shutdown file is not
created, the error message accessed a variable that
doesn't exist.
PR: conf/75722
Submitted by: Nicolas Rachinsky <list@rachinsky.de>
default for now. Default flags create missing directories.
Remove comment about doing this in etc/rc.d/var.
Unlike in the PR, I chose to do this in the lpd script where we reliably
have /usr available.
PR: conf/71488
Submitted by: RZ-FreeBSD0904 at fh-karlsruhe dot de
to hit this case when /usr is remote and thus hasn't been mounted (since
you're supposed to have /var before mounting remote file systems).
Normal machines that don't have a /var for some reason will have /usr
already available because it's local.
- Enable it by default, running newsyslog with -CN which creates files
that have the C flag specified in /etc/newsyslog.conf.
- Remove the "newsyslog -CC" call from etc/rc.d/var and the check for
newsyslog.
- Add the C flag to entries in /etc/newsyslog.conf that are currently
installed as part of the base system.
There are two effects from this change:
- Users who delete default syslog files to stop logging to them
will need to set newsyslog_enable=NO in rc.conf or remove the C
flag from those file in /etc/newsyslog.conf or they will come back
on the next boot.
- Diskless systems now create the same set of files that ordinary
systems have by default instead of every file in newsyslog.conf.
to create /var/log/lastlog.
- Also create /var/log/wtmp if missing.
- Attempt to create these files unless populate_var is NO rather then
only when /var is empty or populate_var=YES.
frequencies are specified with performance_cpu_freq and economy_cpu_freq.
Of course, special values LOW and HIGH are also supported. Also, remove
old throttling support.
rc.d/mountcritlocal and sed(1) is placed in /usr/bin/. Other useful tools
for this task are also placed in /usr/ (tr(1), awk(1)), so I implemented
local_tr() function which works simlar to tr(1).
Reported by: Amir Shalem <amir@boom.org.il>
MFC after: 1 week
user owns these directories or the sticky bit is unset may open security holes,
so simply create them at startup with the correct owner/mode.
MFC after: 1 day
1. Feature: for flexibility reasons and as a prerequisite to clean
shutdowns, allow the configuration of a stop/shutdown command
via rc.conf variable "jail_<name>_exec_stop" in addition to the
start/boot command (rc.conf variable "jail_<name>_exec_start"). For
backward compatibility reasons, rc.conf variable "jail_<name>_exec"
is still supported, too.
2. Debug: Add the used boot/shutdown commands to the debug output of
the /etc/rc.d/jail script, too.
3. Security: Run the Jail start/boot command in a cleaned environment
to not leak information from the host to the Jail during startup.
4. Feature: Run the Jail stop/shutdown command "jail_<name>_exec_stop" on
"/etc/rc.d/jail stop <name>" to allow a graceful shutdown of the Jail
before its processes are just killed.
5. Bugfix: When killing the remaining Jail processes give the processes
time to actually perform their termination sequence. Without this the
subsequent umount(8) operations usually fail because the resources
are still in use. Additionally, if after trying to TERM-inate the
processes there are still processes hanging around, finally just KILL
them.
6. Bugfix: In rc.shutdown, if running inside a Jail, skip the /etc/rc.d/*
scripts which are flagged with the KEYWORD "nojail" to allow the
correct operation of rc.shutdown under jail_<name>_exec_stop="/bin/sh
/etc/rc.shutdown". This is analogous to what /etc/rc does inside a Jail.
Now the following typical host-configuration for two Jails works as
expected and correctly boots and shutdowns the Jails:
-----------------------------------------------------------
# /etc/rc.conf:
jail_enable="YES"
jail_list="foo bar"
jail_foo_rootdir="/j/foo"
jail_foo_hostname="foo.example.com"
jail_foo_ip="192.168.0.1"
jail_foo_devfs_enable="YES"
jail_foo_mount_enable="YES"
jail_foo_exec_start="/bin/sh /etc/rc"
jail_foo_exec_stop="/bin/sh /etc/rc.shutdown"
jail_bar_rootdir="/j/bar"
jail_bar_hostname="bar.example.com"
jail_bar_ip="192.168.0.2"
jail_bar_devfs_enable="YES"
jail_bar_mount_enable="YES"
jail_bar_exec_start="/path/to/kjailer -v"
jail_bar_exec_stop="/bin/sh -c 'killall kjailer && sleep 60'"
-----------------------------------------------------------
# /etc/fstab.foo
/v/foo /j/foo/v/foo nullfs rw 0 0
-----------------------------------------------------------
# /etc/fstab.bar
/v/bar /j/bar/v/bar nullfs rw 0 0
-----------------------------------------------------------
Reviewed by: freebsd-hackers
MFC after: 2 weeks
this feature for a jail named foo :
jail_foo_mount_enable="YES"
jail_foo_fstab="/etc/fstab.foo"
The second line is actually useless, since the code defaults to
using "/etc/fstab.$jailname" as the fstab file if none is specified.
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: Jeremie Le Hen <jeremie@le-hen.org>
These can be used to pass extra options to the mdmfs(8) utility,
to customize the finer details of the md file system creation
(i.e. to turn on/off softupdates, to specify a default owner for md
filesystem, etc).
Use these two new flags to mount tmpmfs and varmfs without
softupdates, since it doesn't make much sense to use SU on
malloc-backed file systems.
Reviewed by: mtm
Inspired by: J. D. Bronson, jbronson at wixb dot com
on the system.
To start/stop/check on a specific device give the device name as
the second argument to the script:
# /etc/rc.d/moused start ums0
To use different rc.conf(5) knobs with different mice use the device
name as part of the knob. For example, if the mouse device is ums0, then:
moused_ums0_enable=yes
moused_ums0_flags="-z 4"
moused_ums0_port="/dev/ums0"
Starting rc.d/moused without the device argument will use the standard
moused_* flags. So, this commit should not disrupt or change current usage.
To preserve current behaviour with respect to usb mice, which appear
automatically when inserted, there is a new knob, moused_nondefault_enable,
which will treat any devices without rc.conf knobs as enabled.
To minimize knobs in /etc/rc.conf, the device file and pid file are
auto-computed, so that in the typical case for a usb mouse you don't
need to add anything extra in /etc/rc.conf to get it working.
Additionally, this updates /etc/usbd.conf to use the rc.d/moused script so
people don't have to modify it to configure their usb mouse anymore.
MFC after: 1 month
device
device.bde
/dev/device
/dev/device.bde
- Fix stop routine:
+ There don't have to be file system mounted on gbde device,
so ignore errors from umount(8).
+ Only detach existing gbde devices.
I used ugly "/dev/${parent}" instead of "${parentdev}", because "/dev/"
prefix for devices listed in gbde_devices variable is optional.
Reported by: Sean McNeil <sean@mcneil.com>
to NO of course). Provide a basic ruleset file, rc.bsdextended, but allow
the filename to be overridden through rc.conf.
Discussed with: rwatson (awhile ago)
by default when named is enabled. Also, improve our default directory
layout by creating /var/named/etc/namedb/{master|slave} directories,
and use the former for the generated localhost* files.
Rather than using pax to copy device entries, mount devfs in the
chroot directory.
There may be some corner cases where things need to be adjusted,
but overall this structure has been well tested on a production
network, and should serve the needs of the vast majority of users.
UPDATING has instructions on how to do the conversion for those
with existing configurations.
chrooted the pid symlink code should not fire. Also, remove the quotes
around the chroot variable in the rndc-confgen invocation so that if
not chrooted the command will still succeed.
Pointed out by: Sean McNeil <sean@mcneil.com>
1. Making the pid symlink now has to happen after named starts, otherwise
it can generate a fatal error.
2. named-xfer is not part of the BIND 9 world.
3. BIND 9 needs a /dev/random in the chroot directory if chrooted.
4. Only the pid file is symlinked now, the ndc socket is BIND 8 only.
5. Create an rndc.key file for the user if one does not exist.
This (generally) allows a BIND 8 config file to be used in a BIND 9
world with little or no modification.
Without this change, if one had a swap-on-mirror configuration, gmirror
will rebuild mirror component(s) on boot, because they are dirty (they
were open on shutdown).
complete backout as the ntpd_sync_on_start etc/rc.conf tunable is still
present, though the default is now NO (was YES). Since we're no longer
syncing time at startup by default when ntpd is enabled (as was the case
24hrs ago), remove UPDATING entry pointing out that ntpd(1) -g is slower
than ntpdate(1).
Hopefully ntpd_sync_on_start="YES" can be made the default for -CURRENT
after 5.3 is cut. At the very least, this should be set to YES when a
user requests to have ntpd enabled via sysinstall(1).
Requested by: many
calls to ntpd -g. ntpd is noticeably slower than ntpdate, but is also more
accurate. This removes the nasty hackery in rc.d/ntpdate that would parse
out ntp servers from /etc/ntp.conf (ntpd knows how to read its own config
file). By default, ntpd *will* sync with its listed time servers. To
turn this off so that ntpd does not sync, ntpd_sync_on_start="NO" can be
added to /etc/rc.conf. If ntpd is not enabled (the default), then time is
not synced on startup. ntpdate has been depreciated by the ntpd authors
for quite some time so this change shouldn't be unexpected.
Suggested by: des
Approved by: roberto (resident ntp guru)
calls to ntpd -g. ntpd is noticably slower than ntpdate, but is also more
accurate. This removes the nasty hackery in rc.d/ntpdate that would parse
out ntp servers from /etc/ntp.conf (ntpd knows how to read its own config
file). By default, ntpd *will* sync with its listed time servers. To
turn this off so that ntpd does not sync, ntpd_sync_on_start="NO" can be
added to /etc/rc.conf. If ntpd is not enabled (the default), then time is
not synced on startup. ntpdate's use has been depreciated by the ntpd
authors for quite some time so this change shouldn't be unexpected.
Suggested by: des
Approved by: roberto (resident ntp guru)
part of the pf module.
While here fix a comment that was c'n'ped from rc.d/pf
PR: bin/71096 (partly)
Submitted by: Ville-Pertti Keinonen
MFC after: 2 days
the submit and outbound daemon, else if sendmail_submit_enable=yes, don't
start the outbound daemon. Only one daemon should be started.
Also, do not rebuild database maps at boot time. The code didn't pay
attention to SENDMAIL_MAP_TYPE and assumed 'hash'. Also, admins may
not want maps automatically rebuilt just because the back end database
has changed. Finally, some maps are built with mode tools than just
makemap (e.g., using cidrexpand on the access text file before sending
it to makemap).
Noticed by: ache
Reviewed by: ache
than one interface from the command line:
# /etc/rc.d/netif start bfe0 xl0
It's also possible to restart an interface(s):
# /etc/rc.d/netif restart bfe0
This required some changes to rc.subr(8) so that if the start/stop commands
are overidden the rest of the command line (after the start/stop/etc... cmd)
is passed through to the subroutines.
o Separate out local (ports) scripts that use rc.d, and the old style
startup/shutdown scripts and execute them separately. On startup the
rc.d style scripts are executed first and then the old-style scripts.
On shutdown, exactly the reverse happens.
o The rc.d ports scripts should now behave more like base system scripts.
Scripts ending in .sh will be sourced into the current shell, while the
rest will be executed in a subshell. Previously, all ports scripts,
regardless of the .sh suffix, were executed in a subshell.
o The parent script, /etc/rc.d/localpkg, passes its command line arguments
straight to the rc.d ports scripts. This means they should now honor
faststop and faststart commands as well. Old style scripts, should not see
any differences. They will still get either a start or stop command.
o The initial phrase shown during shutdown has been changed to use
"local packages" instead of "daemon processes" to be more inline with the
phrase used during local package startup. The phrases are also used only for
old-style ports script startup/shutdown, whereas previously they were being
used for both rc.d and old-style scripts. This should make startup/shutdown
output a bit less ugly.
Discussed with: portmgr
Has Reservations: eik
- Ask the user up to X times (3 by default) for the pass-phrase, if
it is incorrect the first time.
- Add support for storing the lockfiles in another other directory
than /etc.
- Document that it is possible to override the location of each single
lockfile.
Approved by: pjd
ip6addrctl_enable is set to YES, address selection policy is installed
into kernel.
If there is /etc/ip6addrctl.conf, it is used for address selection
policy. Even if there is no /etc/ip6addrctl.conf, we install default
policy. In this case, if ipv6_enable is set to YES, we use address
selection policy described in RFC 3484 as default. Otherwise, we
install priority policy for IPv4 address.
The default of ip6addrctl_enable is NO for now. However, it may
better to enable it by default.
The reason for doing this is that (at least some) 4.x binaries are very
unhappy if host.conf does not exist, and if we create host.conf but not
nsswitch.conf, nsswitch.conf will be created at the next reboot, so it
is better to create a correct nsswitch.conf right away.
use the conf/* stuff for their firewall configuration.
Running ipfw before could seem to make sense in that it would allow
one to setup access to the NFS server on a "default-deny" kernel,
but it is pretty obvious to the casual observer that such a configuration
never makes it far enough to mount the NFS-root in the first place.
debug.watchdog since it is not created by hardware watchdog(4) devices.
The watchdog(4) device is always compiled in the kernel, so removing the
check should not cause any problems.
Approved by: phk
initdiskless. The output of several commands and if available the
contents of /entropy are feed into /dev/random to kickstart the PRNG.
/etc/rc.d/initrandom is left alone to maintain the previous behavior as
much as possiable.
Further work in this area is probably needed.
Discussed with: markm
and permissions specified per rc.conf(5) now apply both to the md
device and to the mountpoint directory, after the mount has completed.
This has to be done in two steps, because chown is not available
until after /usr has been mounted, but the mdconfig and newfs steps
have to complete before fstab processing.
(when new natd is started before old natd died) and allows to manage natd
without touching ipfw.
natd should probably be killed with SIGKILL when stopping natd.
- Use sendmail_foo variables after load_rc_config so that they actually work.
- Utilize sendmail_procname.
- Check sendmail_submit_enable instead of sendmail_enable when dealing
with mail submission MTA.
comments and empty lines have been touched.
All of this should go in the diskless(8) manpage, now if we had
some kind of 'literate programming' tool to extract the comments
from the script and put them in a reasonable nroff format, it
would be a lot easier to keep code and docs in sync
+ SUBDIR.cpio.gz prevents files from SUBDIR/ to be copied when
priming the memory filesystems. This restores the old behaviour
and makes the copy process a lot more efficient
+ look for templates also in the list of directories supplied by
bootp/dhcp via the T134 option aka kern.bootp_cookie
+ keep track of directories temporarily mounted with "remount"
or "diskless_remount" commands and unmount them once we are done
with them (at the end of this script).
1. Add the shutdown keyword so that the script is run at shutdown time,
and the mixer* files are saved.
2. Twiddle whitespace.
3. Remove an unecessary function, and therefore collapse one variable.
hostname, resolve, tmp, and var scripts. The latter three are new and
were repo copied. These scripts no longer depend on being booted with
and NFS root instead attempt to automaticly create mfs /tmp and /var
volumes if the they are not writable. This behavior can be overridden
in /etc/rc.conf.
Reviewed by: luigi, pjd
Yes, this means for stuff OTHER than jails, too. Example usage:
#devfs_system_ruleset="root"
devfs_set_rulesets="/dev=root /etc/namedb/dev=named_devfs"
in the system on shutdown and restores the settings on boot. The settings
can also be reset to the saved values via 'mixer reload'.
Reviewed by: current@
thing, but we're ready to move on.
2. Remove the -g default argument in named_flags. It doesn't actually do
what most users think it does, and what most users want it to do is already
accomplished with a proper default group for the bind user, which we have.
Also, the -g knob does something entirely different in BIND 9, which leads
to a lot of needless confusion/aggravation.
3. In the rc.d script, don't bogusly override $command, or $rc_flags. Both
are adequately handled in rc.conf[.local].
4. DO properly override $rc_flags if user has named_chrootdir set.
This may need to be revisited, but should be ok for now.
5. Protect all chrootdir-related bits under that variable, instead of
named_rcng.
There is more work to be done here, especially in the area of BIND 9
compatibility, but this is a start at least.
Prompted in part by (legitmate) grousing from: kuriyama, Randy Bush
In particular, this allows a "virgin" system installed from
source (installworld, installkernel, cd etc && make distribution)
to boot correctly and modestly simplifies the creation
of single-partition network/cdrom/CF bootable images.
Trigger not only on diskless booting sysctls being set, but also
on the existence of the file "/etc/diskless". But do not try to
extract IP# related keywords in that case.
Add a general "remount" facility to allow non-NFS remounting.
included a start_precmd check for gated. The precommand was not
executed in the FreeBSD branch. When I did a mass removal of
NetBSD specific logic a while back this file apparently got only
a partial treatement. This bug did not have any functional consequences,
however, since the precommand was not declared to the rc.subr routines.
Noticed by: pjd
Certain MTA configurations mean that the notifications from
virecover keep bouncing; so here's a patch to allow administrators
to turn them off.
PR: conf/54910
Submitted by: bms (with a minor cleanup)
I committed it. Apologies to Juergen Unger <j.unger@addict.de>.
o When stopping jails output the hostname of the jails that
were stopped.
o Refactor
o Remove extraneous empty line
o Correct spelling error
that the keys are currently generated by computing the MD5 checksum of 512
bytes read from /dev/random, and are passed to gbde on the command line.
Sponsored by: Teleplan AS
This commit also removes the support for the sysutils/jailer port. This
is inline with the general policy to keep ports related knobs out
of the base system's configuration mechanism.
Submitted by: Juergen Unger <j.unger@addict.de>
in keeping the scripts under rc.d in sync with us. So, remove
NetBSD specific stuff (which made our scripts more complicated
than necessary).
The NetBSD ident string will be left intact, both for history and
also incase we wish to pull in future versions.
in keeping the scripts under rc.d in sync with us. So, remove
NetBSD specific stuff (which made our scripts more complicated
than necessary).
The NetBSD ident string will be left intact, both for history and
also incase we wish to pull in future versions.
in keeping the scripts under rc.d in sync with us. So, begin removal
of NetBSD specific stuff (which made our scripts more complicated
than necessary), starting with the NetBSD KEYWORD.
the throttling state in response to line transitions. Future plans
include adding support for CPU frequency changes.
Add a devd.conf entry for calling this script.
The default values for this are:
performance_cx_lowest="HIGH" # Use HLT (C0) online
performance_throttle_state="HIGH" # 100% (no throttling)
economy_cx_lowest="LOW" # Use the lowest Cx state possible
economy_throttle_state="HIGH" # 100% (no throttling)
systems are mounted. An example set of entries for /etc/rc.conf:
ataraid_enable="YES"
ataraid_devices="ar0"
ataraid_ar0_set="ad2 ad3"
ataraid_ar0_type="RAID1"
Because there is no "correct" way of doing ATA raid (ie, geom vs.
atacontrol vs. vinum) that is bikeshed proof, this rcng script stays within
the bounds of atacontrol and assumes that other RAID solutions for GEOM or
vinum will end up in a different rcNG script.
Reviewed by: green
then immediately terminate the shell (during boot this
also terminates the parent rc(8) shell). This was the pre-rcNG behaviour.
Also, remove an extraneous mount /.
PR: conf/57659
Submitted by: yar (with modifications)
time during the boot process. This is needed in the case where NFS mounts
from servers reachable only via IPSEC are in /etc/fstab.
PR: conf/42497
Submitted by: Volker Stolz
Approved by: re (rwatson)
porting this stuff back.
* Test /etc/motd for writability before trying to update it. This is
especially useful when /etc/ is mounted ro, like on a diskless boot.
(Thanks to phk for the idea on this one.)
* Make the "updating" message reflect what actually happens.