RC.D(8) - System Manager's Manual

RC.D(8) - System Manager’s Manual #

RC.D(8) - System Manager’s Manual

NAME #

rc.d - daemon control scripts

SYNOPSIS #

/etc/rc.d/daemon [-df] action

DESCRIPTION #

The /etc/rc.d directory contains ksh(1) scripts to start, stop, and reconfigure daemon programs (“services”).

Services installed from packages(7) may be started at boot time in the order specified by the pkg_scripts variable from rc.conf(8); the order will be reversed during shutdown. Services comprising OpenBSD base are started by rc(8).

The options are as follows:

-d

Setting this option will print the function names as they are called and prevent the rc.subr(8) framework from redirecting stdout and stderr to /dev/null. This is used to allow debugging of failed actions.

-f

This option only affects the start action. It will forcibly start the daemon whatever value daemon_flags is set to. If daemon_flags is set to “NO”, execution will continue with the script’s own defaults unless other flags are specified.

Each such script responds to the following actions:

start

Start the service, if not already running.

stop

Stop the service.

reload

Tell the daemon to reload its configuration.

restart

Perform a stop, then a start.

check

Return 0 if the daemon is running or 1 if it is not.

configtest

Check that the daemon configuration is valid.

ENVIRONMENT #

Daemon control scripts use a fixed number of ksh(1) variables when starting a daemon. The following can be overridden by site-specific values provided in rc.conf.local(8):

daemon_execdir

Run daemon from the specified directory.

daemon_flags

Additional arguments to call the daemon with. These will be appended to any mandatory arguments already contained in the daemon variable defined in the control script. If daemon_flags is set to “NO”, it will prevent the daemon from starting even when listed in pkg_scripts.

daemon_logger

Redirect standard output and error to logger(1) using the configured priority (e.g. “daemon.info”).

daemon_rtable

Routing table to run the daemon under, using route(8).

daemon_timeout

Maximum time in seconds to wait for the start, stop and reload actions to return. This is only guaranteed with the default rc_start, rc_stop and rc_reload functions.

daemon_user

User to run the daemon as, using su(1).

To obtain the actual variable names, replace daemon with the name of the script. For example, postgres is managed through /etc/rc.d/postgresql:

daemon_flags=-D /var/postgresql/data -w -l /var/postgresql/logfile

To override this and increase the debug log level (keeping the existing flags), define the following in rc.conf.local(8):

postgresql_flags=-D /var/postgresql/data -w -l /var/postgresql/logfile -d 5

Each script may define its own defaults, as explained in rc.subr(8).

daemon_class is a special read-only variable. It is set to “daemon” unless there is a login class configured in login.conf(5) with the same name as the rc.d script itself, in which case it will be set to that login class. This allows setting many initial process properties, for example environment variables, scheduling priority, and process limits such as maximum memory use and number of files.

FILES #

/etc/rc.d/

Directory containing daemon control scripts.

/etc/rc.d/rc.subr

Functions and variables used by rc.d scripts.

/var/run/rc.d/

Directory containing files recording the variables of currently running daemons. Some are informational and some are for matching daemons using pgrep(1) and pkill(1).

SEE ALSO #

ksh(1), rc(8), rc.conf(8), rc.subr(8), rcctl(8)

HISTORY #

The /etc/rc.d directory first appeared in OpenBSD 4.9.

OpenBSD 7.5 - September 2, 2022