Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris How to make SMF service start last? Post 302794811 by jlliagre on Tuesday 16th of April 2013 07:14:51 PM
Old 04-16-2013
Dependencies are of course deterministic. My point was unlike with System V init.d commands, there is no visible linear path based on files being sorted by their "SXXname" and "KXXname" so a S99zz services would likely run after all the other ones.

With smf, there is then no deterministic last service unless it explicitly states it depends on each other ones using the optional_all tag to ignore explicitly disabled services.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Smf managed service not starting

Hi Experts, While playing with smf in my local system ( which is not in production ) i am unable to restart the service svc:/network/nfs/server:default . I tried starting it in different way, however unable to restart the same. I was checking the dependency for that I disabled the... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumarmani
11 Replies

2. Solaris

SMF service HELP

I would like to run command whenever system boot up, i.e "/opt/admin/script/closegen -c /opt/share/script/colsehg" How do I integrate above command in to SMF services. -sam (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sam786
1 Replies

3. Solaris

Permission denied in SMF service log

I can't get the exact error message because I am at home, but on Solaris 10u5 machine I have at work, a few services are stuck in the maintenance state with the following error message in the individual service logs (/var/svc/log/FMRI:instance.log): Cannot chdir: permission denied Fortunately... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ilikecows
2 Replies

4. Infrastructure Monitoring

Using SMF to register & start a (Nagios) service

I'm trying to register & start a service using SMF on Solaris 10. It's nsca, part of the Nagios monitoring system. I've got nsca running fine as a detached process, and can manually create passive checks via send_nsca. But when I try to run nsca as a daemon, I need some advice. The nsca... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: lyle
0 Replies

5. Solaris

SMF: How to start inetd and all its dependents?

Hi, Here is the questions: inetd on this Solaris 10 zone fails to start at boot time. Inetd has 4 dependents not started. These 4 dependents have their own dependents not started. How it happened? How can I use one or a few command to start inetd and all its dependents and dependents' dependents?... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
11 Replies

6. Solaris

Service shutdown sequence via SMF

Hi all, Is there any way to configure a certain service to be shutdown first via SMF? Thanks in advance Eugene (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: srage
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Service shutdown sequence via SMF

Hi all, Is there any way to configure a certain service to be shutdown first via SMF? Thanks in advance Eugene (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: srage
2 Replies

8. Solaris

removing associated processes from a SMF service

I'm running Tibco Hawk (hawkhma and agent) on a number of solaris 10 boxes (both x86 and Sparc). Tibco Hawk is a monitoring system, that can monitor processs and logs on the OS and applications. It also have the ability to start a process, if it for some reason, have died. I have implemented... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: u_paludan
2 Replies

9. Solaris

OBP, start SMF serially

how to boot Solaris 10 from ok prompt, so that SMF services are started serially? thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: orange47
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Service smf ntp maintenance

Hello, My ntp service goes in maintenance mode in Solaris 11. I do "svcadm clear ntp", the service is back but after 1 minute it crashes but automatically restarted. After the third attempt it goes in maintenance again : After the clear : 1 minute later it crashes but it is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bob74350
2 Replies
init.d(4)																 init.d(4)

NAME
init.d - initialization and termination scripts for changing init states SYNOPSIS
/etc/init.d /etc/init.d is a directory containing initialization and termination scripts for changing init states. These scripts are linked when appro- priate to files in the rc?.d directories, where `?' is a single character corresponding to the init state. See init(1M) for definitions of the states. The service management facility (see smf(5)) is the preferred mechanism for service initiation and termination. The init.d and rc?.d direc- tories are obsolete, and are provided for compatibility purposes only. Applications launched from these directories by svc.startd(1M) are incomplete services, and will not be restarted on failure. File names in rc?.d directories are of the form [SK]nn<init.d filename>, where S means start this job, K means kill this job, and nn is the relative sequence number for killing or starting the job. When entering a state (init S,0,2,3,etc.) the rc[S0-6] script executes those scripts in /etc/rc[S0-6].d that are prefixed with K followed by those scripts prefixed with S. When executing each script in one of the /etc/rc[S0-6] directories, the /sbin/rc[S0-6] script passes a single argument. It passes the argument 'stop' for scripts prefixed with K and the argument 'start' for scripts prefixed with S. There is no harm in applying the same sequence number to multiple scripts. In this case the order of execution is deterministic but unspecified. Guidelines for selecting sequence numbers are provided in README files located in the directory associated with that target state. For example, /etc/rc[S0-6].d/README. Absence of a README file indicates that there are currently no established guidelines. Do not put /etc/init.d in your $PATH. Having this directory in your $PATH can cause unexpected behavior. The programs in /etc/init.d are associated with init state changes and, under normal circumstances, are not intended to be invoked from a command line. Example 1: Example of /sbin/rc2. When changing to init state 2 (multi-user mode, network resources not exported), /sbin/rc2 is initiated by the svc.startd(1M) process. The following steps are performed by /sbin/rc2. 1. In the directory /etc/rc2.d are files used to stop processes that should not be running in state 2. The filenames are prefixed with K. Each K file in the directory is executed (by /sbin/rc2) in alphanumeric order when the system enters init state 2. See example below. 2. Also in the rc2.d directory are files used to start processes that should be running in state 2. As in Step 1, each S file is executed. Assume the file /etc/init.d/netdaemon is a script that will initiate networking daemons when given the argument 'start', and will terminate the daemons if given the argument 'stop'. It is linked to /etc/rc2.d/S68netdaemon, and to /etc/rc0.d/K67netdaemon. The file is executed by /etc/rc2.d/S68netdaemon start when init state 2 is entered and by /etc/rc0.d/K67netdaemon stop when shutting the system down. svcs(1), init(1M), svc.startd(1M), svccfg(1M), smf(5) Solaris now provides an expanded mechanism, which includes automated restart, for applications historically started via the init script mechanism. The Service Management Facility (introduced in smf(5)) is the preferred delivery mechanism for persistently running applica- tions. Existing init.d scripts will, however, continue to be executed according to the rules in this manual page. The details of execution in relation to managed services are available in svc.startd(1M). On earlier Solaris releases, a script named with a suffix of '.sh' would be sourced, allowing scripts to modify the environment of other scripts executed later. This behavior is no longer supported; for altering the environment in which services are run, see the setenv sub- command in svccfg(1M). /sbin/rc2 has references to the obsolescent rc.d directory. These references are for compatibility with old INSTALL scripts. New INSTALL scripts should use the init.d directory for related executables. The same is true for the shutdown.d directory. 17 Aug 2005 init.d(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:22 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy