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RC(8) System Manager's Manual RC(8)

rccommand scripts for auto-reboot and daemon startup

rc

rc.conf

rc.conf.local

rc.d/

rc.firewall

rc.local

rc.shutdown

rc.shutdown.local

rc.subr

The rc utility is the command script which controls the automatic boot process after being called by init(8). The rc.local and rc.shutdown.local scripts contains commands which are pertinent only to a specific site. Typically, scripts in /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ is used instead of rc.local and rc.shutdown.local these days but if you want to use them it is still supported. In this case, they should source /etc/rc.conf and contain additional custom startup and shutdown code for your system. The best way to handle rc.local and rc.shutdown.local, however, is to separate them out into rc.d/ style scripts and place them under /usr/local/etc/rc.d/. The rc.conf file contains the global system configuration information referenced by the startup scripts, while rc.conf.local contains the local system configuration. See rc.conf(5) for more information.

The rc.d/ directories contain scripts which will be automatically executed at boot time and shutdown time.

  1. Source /etc/rc.subr to load various rc.subr(8) shell functions to use.
  2. If autobooting, set autoboot=yes and enable a flag (rc_fast=yes), which prevents the rc.d/ scripts from performing the check for already running processes (thus speeding up the boot process). This rc_fast=yes speedup will not occur when rc is started up after exiting the single-user shell.
  3. If the file /firstboot does not exist, add “firstboot” to the list of KEYWORDS to skip in rcorder(8).
  4. Invoke rcorder(8) to order the files in /etc/rc.d/ that do not have a “nostart” keyword (refer to rcorder(8)'s -s flag), and assign the result to a variable.
  5. Call each script in turn using () (from rc.subr(8)), which sets $1 to “start”, and sources the script in a subshell. If the script has a .sh suffix then it is sourced directly into the current shell.
  6. If the file /firstboot exists, delete it.

  1. Source /etc/rc.subr to load various rc.subr(8) shell functions to use.
  2. Invoke rcorder(8) to order the files in /etc/rc.d/ that have a “shutdown” keyword (refer to rcorder(8)'s -k flag), reverse that order, and assign the result to a variable.
  3. Call each script in turn using run_rc_script() (from rc.subr(8)), which sets $1 to “stop”, and sources the script in a subshell. If the script has a .sh suffix then it is sourced directly into the current shell.

rc.d/ is located in /etc/rc.d/. The following file naming conventions are currently used in rc.d/:

ALLUPPERCASE
Scripts that are “placeholders” to ensure that certain operations are performed before others. In order of startup, these are:
NETWORKING
Ensure basic network services are running, including general network configuration (netif, routing, network_ipv6, ppp).
SERVERS
Ensure basic services (such as NETWORKING and syslogd) exist for services that start early (such as named), because they are required by DAEMON below.
DAEMON
Check-point before all general purpose daemons such as dhcpd, ftpd and lpd.
LOGIN
Check-point before user login services (inetd and sshd), as well as services which might run commands as users (cron, jail and sendmail).
foo.sh
Scripts that are to be sourced into the current shell rather than a subshell have a .sh suffix. Extreme care must be taken in using this, as the startup sequence will terminate if the script terminates.
bar
Scripts that are sourced in a subshell. These can stop the boot if necessary with the following shell commands:
if [ "$autoboot" = yes ]; then
	kill -TERM $$
fi
exit 1

Note that this should be used extremely sparingly!

Each script should contain rcorder(8) keywords, especially an appropriate “PROVIDE” entry, and if necessary “REQUIRE” and “BEFORE” keywords.

Each script is expected to support at least the following arguments, which are automatically supported if it uses the () function:

Start the service. This should check that the service is to be started as specified by rc.conf(5). Also checks if the service is already running and refuses to start if it is. This latter check is not performed by standard DragonFly scripts if the system is starting directly to multi-user mode, to speed up the boot process. If faststart is given, skip the PID check. If forcestart is given, ignore the rc.conf(5) check and start anyway.
If the service is to be started as specified by rc.conf(5), stop the service. This should check that the service is running and complain if it is not. If forcestop is given, ignore the rc.conf(5) check and attempt to stop.
Perform a stop then a start.
Send $sig_reload (defaults to HUP) to the program(s) associated with the service. Note that not all scripts enable the reload command.
If the script starts a process (rather than performing a one-off operation), show the status of the process. Otherwise it is not necessary to support this argument. Defaults to displaying the process ID of the program (if running).
If the script starts a process (rather than performing a one-off operation), wait for the command to exit. Otherwise it is not necessary to support this argument.
Display which rc.conf(5) variables are used to control the startup of the service (if any).

If a script must implement additional commands it can list them in the extra_commands variable, and define their actions in a variable constructed from the command name (see the EXAMPLES section).

The following key points apply to old-style scripts in /usr/local/etc/rc.d/:

When an automatic reboot is in progress, rc is invoked with the argument autoboot. One of the scripts run from /etc/rc.d/ is /etc/rc.d/fsck. This script runs fsck(8) with option -p to “preen” all UFS(5) file systems of minor inconsistencies resulting from the last system shutdown. If preening fails further action depends on the rc.conf(5) variable fsck_y_enable: if the value is “NO” (default) rc exits, if value is “YES”, fsck(8) is run with option -y, if this also fails rc exits. If autoboot is not set, when going from single-user to multi-user mode for example, the script does not do anything.

The /etc/rc.d/localdaemons script can execute scripts from multiple rc.d/ directories. The default locations are /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ and /usr/pkg/etc/rc.d/, but these may be overridden with the local_startup rc.conf(5) variable.

The /etc/rc.d/serial script is used to set any special configurations for serial devices.

The /etc/rc.d/{net*,routing} scripts are used to start the network. The network is started in several passes. The first pass, /etc/rc.d/netif, configures the network interfaces. The /etc/rc.d/routing script starts routing and sets routing options. The /etc/rc.d/netoptions script sets additional networking options. Finally, the /etc/rc.d/network_ipv6 script configures IPv6 interfaces and options.

The rc.firewall script is used to configure rules for the ipfw(4) kernel based firewall service. It has several possible options:

will allow anyone in
will try to protect just this machine
will try to protect a whole network
totally disables IP services except via lo0 interface
disables the loading of firewall rules
filename
will load the rules in the given filename (full path required).

Most daemons, including network related daemons, have their own script in /etc/rc.d/, which can be used to start, stop, and check the status of the service.

Any architecture specific scripts, such as specifically check that they are on that architecture before starting the daemon.

Following tradition, all startup files reside in /etc.

/etc/rc
 
/etc/rc.conf
 
/etc/rc.conf.local
 
/etc/rc.d/
 
/etc/rc.firewall
 
/etc/rc.local
 
/etc/rc.shutdown
 
/etc/rc.shutdown.local
 
/etc/rc.subr
 

The following is a minimal rc.d/ style script. Most scripts require little more than the following.

#!/bin/sh
#

# PROVIDE: foo
# REQUIRE: bar_service_required_to_precede_foo
# BEFORE:  baz_service_requiring_foo_to_precede_it

. /etc/rc.subr

name="foo"
rcvar=`set_rcvar`
command="/usr/local/bin/foo"

load_rc_config $name
run_rc_command "$1"

Certain scripts may want to provide enhanced functionality. The user may access this functionality through additional commands. The script may list and define as many commands at it needs.

#!/bin/sh
#

# PROVIDE: foo
# REQUIRE: bar_service_required_to_precede_foo
# BEFORE:  baz_service_requiring_foo_to_precede_it

. /etc/rc.subr

name="foo"
rcvar=`set_rcvar`
command="/usr/local/bin/foo"
extra_commands="nop hello"
hello_cmd="echo Hello World."
nop_cmd="do_nop"

do_nop()
{
	echo "I do nothing."
}

load_rc_config $name
run_rc_command "$1"

The following is a simple, hypothetical example of an old-style /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ script, which would start a daemon at boot time, and kill it at shutdown time.

#!/bin/sh -
#
#    initialization/shutdown script for foobar package

case "$1" in
start)
	/usr/local/sbin/foo -d && echo -n ' foo'
	;;
stop)
	kill `cat /var/run/foo.pid` && echo -n ' foo'
	;;
*)
	echo "unknown option: $1 - should be 'start' or 'stop'" >&2
	;;
esac

As all processes are killed by init(8) at shutdown, the explicit kill(1) is unnecessary, but is often included.

kill(1), ipfw(4), rc.conf(5), init(8), rcorder(8), rcrun(8), rc.subr(8), reboot(8), savecore(8)

The rc utility appeared in 4.0BSD. The rc.d/ facility was implemented in NetBSD 1.5 and appeared in DragonFly 1.0.

July 20, 2018 DragonFly-5.6.1