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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Start a service manager process automatically on startup Post 302890606 by rparavastu on Thursday 27th of February 2014 02:06:46 PM
Old 02-27-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
There are lots of ways to do it.

One option might be to put a line in root's crontab, which you edit via crontab -e:

Code:
@reboot cd /opt/program_folder/ServiceManager/bin ; nohup ./servce_manager DEV &

Tested the entry in crontab and worked like a charm. Thank You very much.

I have another question. I have a script (ksh script) that starts an application listener.
It is owned by a user scott (command for example: start_listener.ksh -a start ).
This also needs to start at the server start up as scott.

Could you kindly guide me?

Thanks,
Ram.
 

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

NAME
autosysconfig - Maintains the list of dynamic kernel subsystems that are automatically configured SYNOPSIS
/sbin/init.d/autosysconfig add | delete | list [subsystem-name] DESCRIPTION
Use the autosysconfig program to maintain the kernel's list of dynamic subsystems that are automatically configured at each system startup. The following list describes the autosysconfig commands: Adds a dynamic subsystem to the list. At each system startup, the specified sub- system is automatically configured into the kernel. (The object module that contains the subsystem must exist in the /subsys or /var/subsys directory for automatic configuration to work correctly.) You must specify the subsystem-name parameter with the add command. Deletes a dynamic subsystem from the list. At each system startup, the specified subsystem is omitted from the kernel. You must specify the subsys- tem-name parameter with the delete command. Lists the dynamic subsystems that are automatically configured at system startup. The system issues the sysconfig -c command to configure dynamic subsystems at system startup. The subsystems are added to the kernel dur- ing the execution of the init program. No dynamic subsystems are automatically configured by default. You must add a subsystem name to the list to enable automatic configuration of that subsystem. EXAMPLES
The following are examples of using the autosysconfig command: To add a subsystem to the list of automatically configured subsystems, issue the following command: # /sbin/init.d/autosysconfig add lat This command adds the lat (Local Area Terminal) subsystem to the list. To see what subsystems are on the list, issue the following command: # /sbin/init.d/autosysconfig list Current automatic configuration list includes the following dynamic subsystems: lat SEE ALSO
Commands: sysconfig(8), sysconfigdb(8) System Administration autosysconfig(8)
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