I have a command in init that trys to start a daemon and open a log, but a get an error error that the file access permissions do not allow the specified action. My permissions on the log file are:
The logfile is written to by the main application during processing, but on bootup the daemon fails to open.
So my question is on bootup is init run by the root user?
Last edited by methyl; 03-27-2012 at 05:06 PM..
Reason: please use code tags
I want to get my telnetd to run on startup and was wondering where it was? im used to having it in /etc/init.d/rc.d but it is not the same in hp-ux :(
thanks all (4 Replies)
we have this script that stops, starts and monitor process scheduler. prcs_control. this script runs perfectly when executed by ps_user.
we are now creating a new script that will run this script and is executed by root. this script needs to execute the prcs_control as ps_user because root can... (1 Reply)
Hello.
system fails on reboot this AM.
received message about not possible for kernel to find process that caused crash.
system does memory dump succesfully, then tries to boot again.
looking further at messages during this time, i'm getting 'init died with return value 256'...system panic... (12 Replies)
Hi All,
Am using the below command to start my application using the root user
su - bin -c "/home/bin/test/start.sh"
but am getting the error becaue i have set some environment varibales in bin's .profile
when i execute the command start.sh by logging directly into bin account it's... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I have a linux redhat 9 server and I am concerned about the security on that server.
I would like to be able to write a script that records all the commands that were typed at the command prompt before the user calls the 'history -c' command and deletes all the history.
I was thinking about... (4 Replies)
Hi all.
On one workstation run Solaris 10 a simple user can to execute 'init 0' command without input (su and root password).
Example:
% init 0
%
OK
I don't understand how user can execute 'init 0' command on this workstation?
1) I checked /usr/local/etc/sudoers all lines are... (6 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am doing PXE boot for my GNU/Linux device and pxelinux.0 loads the kernel as well as initrd images I have mentioned in the config file but it looks like it is not considering the init= option. Instead it starts the default INIT program.
I wanted my customized init program to be... (3 Replies)
Hello all,
Fairly simple question here. I know that in Solaris 10 there is a way to tell a system running solaris 10 to init 0 and then boot disk1 all in the same command line from a SSH window. That way once you hit enter it then performs the init 0 and then does the boot disk1. ... (2 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a solaris 10 in my environment (VMware virtual machine). recently I increased the harddisk size from the VMware and reboot my server. after reboot the os is unable to boot and gives the below error message.
exec(/sbin/init) file not found
press any key to restart
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krishna001
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cgrulesengd
CGRULESENGD(8) libcgroup Manual CGRULESENGD(8)NAME
cgrulesengd - control group rules daemon
SYNOPSIS
cgrulesengd [options]
DESCRIPTION
cgrulesengd is a daemon, which distributes processes to control groups. When any process changes its effective UID or GID, cgrulesengd
inspects the list of rules loaded from the cgrules.conf file and moves the process to the appropriate control group.
The list of rules is read during the daemon startup is are cached in the daemon's memory. The daemon reloads the list of rules when it
receives SIGUSR2 signal.
The daemon opens a standard unix socket to receive 'sticky' requests from cgexec.
OPTIONS
-h|--help
Display help.
-f <path>|--logfile=<path>
Write log messages to the given log file. When '-' is used as <path>, log messages are written to the standard output. If '-f' and
'-s' are used together, the logs are sent to both destinations.
-s[facility]|--syslog=[facility]
Write log messages to syslog. The default facility is DAEMON. If '-f' and '-s' are used together, the logs are sent to both destina-
tions.
-n|--nodaemon
Don't fork the daemon, stay in the foreground.
-v|--verbose
Display more log messages. This option can be used twice to enable more verbose log messages.
-q|--quiet
Display less log messages. This option can be used twice to enable even less log messages and to only log errors.
-Q|--nolog
Disable logging.
-d|--debug
Equivalent to '-nvvf -', i.e. don't fork the daemon, display all log messages and write them to the standard output.
-u <user>|--socket-user=<user>
-g <group>|--socket-group=<group> Set the owner of cgrulesengd socket. Assumes that cgexec runs with proper suid permissions so it
can write to the socket when cgexec --sticky is used.
FILES
/etc/cgrules.conf
the default libcgroup configuration file
SEE ALSO
cgrules.conf (5)
Linux 2009-02-18 CGRULESENGD(8)