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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Boot/Shutdown script automation Post 302805183 by Scott on Thursday 9th of May 2013 06:43:01 PM
Old 05-09-2013
Yes. That article explains it well.

You can still use the cron @reboot option to start the script on reboot if the script stops itself when terminated (i.e. when the system shuts down).

i.e. with no bells or whistles a very simple "daemon"
Code:
# /my/script
LOG=/some/logfile

trap 'echo Terminated >> $LOG; exit #do some shutdown stuff here' 0

{
  while :; do
    # do something here
    sleep 60
  done
} 2>&1 >> $LOG

Code:
crontab -l
@reboot /my/script

 

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

NAME
rc - command script for auto-reboot and daemons SYNOPSIS
/etc/rc /etc/rc.local DESCRIPTION
Rc is the command script which controls the automatic reboot and rc.local is the script holding commands which are pertinent only to a spe- cific site. When an automatic reboot is in progress, rc is invoked with the argument autoboot and runs a fsck with option -p to ``preen'' all the disks of minor inconsistencies resulting from the last system shutdown and to check for serious inconsistencies caused by hardware or software failure. If this auto-check and repair succeeds, then the second part of rc is run. The second part of rc, which is run after a auto-reboot succeeds and also if rc is invoked when a single user shell terminates (see init(8)), starts all the daemons on the system, preserves editor files and clears the scratch directory /tmp. Rc.local is executed immedi- ately before any other commands after a successful fsck. Normally, the first commands placed in the rc.local file define the machine's name, using hostname(1), and save any possible core image that might have been generated as a result of a system crash, savecore(8). The latter command is included in the rc.local file because the directory in which core dumps are saved is usually site specific. SEE ALSO
init(8), reboot(8), savecore(8) BUGS
4th Berkeley Distribution April 27, 1985 RC(8)
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