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Full Discussion: Startup script and services
Operating Systems AIX Startup script and services Post 302370484 by bakunin on Wednesday 11th of November 2009 03:20:06 PM
Old 11-11-2009
zxmaus is correct - in fact it is IMHO a rather bad practice to start applications from the inittab, where only the basic system should be started. Applications should be started from S-scripts and stopped from analogous K-scripts in /etc/rc* - this is the very reason the /etc/rc* does exist in fact.

And this is what i am getting at, for reasons of completeness: even if zxmaus didn't mention it, create a corresponding K-script for every S-script you create lest you get troubles using the init/telinit command to switch runlevels.

Entering a new runlevel is done by first running all the K-scripts of the current runlevel, then entering the new runlevel and first thing running all the S-scripts of the new runlevel. If there is a S-script without a corresponding K-script the started process will be left over.

Btw.. the order of the K-/S-scripts being run is alphabetical - this is why they are usually numbered S01-S99/K01-K99 - to enforce a certain order should that be necessary.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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

NAME
runlevel - output previous and current runlevel SYNOPSIS
runlevel [OPTION]... [UTMP] DESCRIPTION
runlevel reads the system UTMP file, which defaults to /var/run/utmp when no alternate filename is given, to locate the most recent run- level record. The previous and current runlevel from that record are output separated by a single space. If there is no previous runlevel in the record, the letter N will be substituted. If no runlevel record can be found, runlevel outputs the word unknown and exits with an error. During system boot, the environment variables RUNLEVEL and PREVLEVEL will be set by the init(8) daemon, these come from the runlevel(7) event generated by telinit(8) or shutdown(8). When these environment variables are set, runlevel will output the values from these instead. Thus runlevel can be used in rc scripts as a replacement for the System-V who(1) -r command. OPTIONS
--quiet Does not output the current and previous runlevel, nor does it output unknown in the case of error (but it will exit with an error code). This may be used to test for the presence of a runlevel entry, or to check for errors reading from the file. EXIT STATUS
runlevel will exit with status 0 if a UTMP record was found, otherwise it will exit with status 1. ENVIRONMENT
RUNLEVEL runlevel will read the current runlevel from this environment variable if set in preference to reading from /var/run/utmp PREVLEVEL runlevel will read the previous runlevel from this environment variable if RUNLEVEL was given, in preference to reading from /var/run/utmp FILES
/var/run/utmp Where the current and previous runlevels will be read from. NOTES
The Upstart init(8) daemon does not keep track of runlevels itself, instead they are implemented entirely by its userspace tools. A change of runlevel is signalled by the runlevel(7) event, generated by either the telinit(8) or shutdown(8) tools. This event includes the new runlevel in the RUNLEVEL environment variable, as well as the previous runlevel (obtained from their own environment or from /var/run/utmp) in the PREVLEVEL variable. As well as generating the event, both tools write the new runlevel back to /var/run/utmp and append a new entry to /var/log/wtmp. AUTHOR
Written by Scott James Remnant <scott@netsplit.com> REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs at <https://launchpad.net/upstart/+bugs> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2009 Canonical Ltd. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU- LAR PURPOSE. SEE ALSO
runlevel(7) init(8) telinit(8) shutdown(8) who(1) Upstart 2009-07-09 runlevel(8)
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