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
every now and then. It is up to the caller to choose a proper
action upon an error condition. Therefore, use return, not exit,
except for some special cases.
Consistently return 1 to indicate an error.
Submitted by: sem (initially)
Reviewed by: freebsd-rc (silence)
MFC after: 2 weeks
source it into the shell. If not, handle it in a subshell the same
way that "real" rc.d-style scripts are handled. This will dramatically
ease the "process local scripts in the base rcorder" transition.
Add *.bak to the list of files in */rc.d that we ignore.
is only present for fstab(5) compatibility, and is
otherwise ignored by mount(8) (not passed to mount_*
programs, and not passed to nmount(2)).
"-u -o rw" worked with an old mount(8) with mount_ufs.c
because "-o rw" was stripped and simple "-u" caused an
update of UFS from read-only to read-write, due to
inability of mount(2) to track changes in options
(MNT_RDONLY is either set or not).
"-u" no longer causes the transition from RO to RW,
now that mount(8) was converted to use nmount(2), so
an explicit change to RW is required. Keep up with
this change, and use "-uw" to mount root read-write.
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.
Simplify the shell scripting a bit, and remove a useless grep | sed
The problem was pointed out by the PR, and I used part of the solution
suggested there, but the semantics changed again for 9.2.x -> 9.3.x.
PR: conf/74228
Submitted by: Jeremy Chadwick <freebsd@jdc.parodius.com>
- 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
to issue sub-commands, e.g., restart = stop + start.
By calling run_rc_command instead, we provide rc.d
scripts with full control over their configuration
variables.
For an example problem the former approach caused, see
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-rc/2005-October/000311.html
Reviewed by: freebsd-rc
Tested by: Dirk Engling erdgeist <at> erdgeist.org
MFC after: 2 weeks
- 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
extraction.
This will allow cpio archive support to work, at least in situations
where /tmp is writable. Because pax requires a writable /tmp it is
unsuitable for this task, but replacing it will come in a later commit.
Submitted by: Joerg Pulz <Joerg dot Pulz at frm2 dot tum dot de>
PR: conf/88293
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
has been set in the first place. This should reduce
unwanted side-effects in rc.d scripts that don't mean
to use $command and rc.subr(8) methods associated with
it at all.
Discussed with: brooks
Reviewed by: -rc (silence)
/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.