HP-UX 11 does not register services anywhere.
Since this has been asked before, I have made a script that tries to emulate it:
It looks for the currently running processes with ppid=1, greps the process names in /sbin/init.d/*, and returns the matching files in /sbin/init.d.
Last edited by MadeInGermany; 03-27-2015 at 11:11 AM..
Reason: excluded commented lines
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to MadeInGermany For This Post:
Hi!
We are having problems with our unix servers (SunOS 5.9) that services for some of our applications are continuously going down. (this is more due to the applications installed than the UNIX OS).
What I am looking for is some kind of administrative tool where I can set what service to scan... (1 Reply)
We have lost our Sys Admin and with the DST changes.. i need to make sure all services are re-started on a SUN server running SUNOS 5.9
How can i list what is running and make sure they are running after the DST patches are applied? (2 Replies)
Hello all happy people! :)
Iam trying to figure out how to disable running services, and witch i can disable. Iam running ssh,apache,ftp and identd.
Here is an output from nmap:
21/tcp open ftp Solaris ftpd
22/tcp open ssh SunSSH 1.1 (protocol 2.0)
23/tcp ... (2 Replies)
I am trying to fetch failed process but while doing that unable to do so. like;
(1)ps -ef | grep snmpCollect
o/p is coming like -
root 12423 4393 1 19:44:06 pts/0 0:00 grep snmpCollect
(2)ps -ef | grep sttps
o/p-
root 15517 4393 0 19:53:24 pts/0 0:00 grep sttps... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I need to write a code which will fetch all the application activity on user computers including app name, time of day, duration, version, etc.
Using this I need to know which applications are running currently in user's computers.
How can it be done programmatically? I need to write the... (1 Reply)
I did search on the subject on services in linux and they do explain how to find what are the services that loaded when the linux boot.
however I have not find how to detect what services run right now.
I would like to now that and how to kill services.
Thanks. (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to list down list of running services, corresponding package name and status on HP-UX box. The output will be a CSV in a fashion:- Service Name, Package Name, Status.
While working on Linux centos, I used chkconfig to do the same. Below was the snippet:-
for i in `chkconfig... (3 Replies)
Hi,
We have a ldap server configured with services (port) and want to know how to fetch that to the ldap clients:
# cat /etc/nsswitch.conf|grep -i services
services: files sss (neither sss nor ldap works)
by doing "#getent services" I am getting only the result from /etc/services but I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Sridaran
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
ifservices
IFSERVICES(5) Network configuration IFSERVICES(5)NAME
ifservices-* - control network services with ifup/down
SYNOPSIS
/etc/sysconfig/network/ifservices-<configuration_name>/
DESCRIPTION
The directory /etc/sysconfig/network/ifservices-<configuration_name>/ is read by the script /etc/sysconfig/network/scripts/ifup-services
which starts and stops system services when an interface is set up/down. ifup-services is used by /sbin/ifup, which is the command line
user interface for setting up network interfaces.
This is useful if you don't have a permanent network connection. If you sometimes boot without network and plug in the network cable later
you can add links to system services in this directory. These services will then be started with ifup and stopped with ifdown.
The configuration name used for ifservices-* should match exactly the configuration name of the ifcfg-* file for the interface.
For the usage with NetworkManager (where you don't necessarily need a ifcfg-* file) you can also use /etc/sysconfig/network/ifser-
vices-<interface>-<essid>/ (for wlan interfaces) or if that does not exist /etc/sysconfig/network/ifservices-<interface>/. As a final
fallback /etc/sysconfig/network/ifservices/ is checked as well. If NetworkManager is active services will be stopped after the interface is
down.
The links in this directory are equal to the links in the runlevel directories /etc/init.d/rc*.d/ They have to point to service start
scripts which are usually in /etc/init.d/. Links starting with 'S' are start links, which are called in alphabetical order after ifup has
set up the interface. Links starting with 'K' are kill links which are called before ifdown takes down the interface. See also section
Sequencing Directories in boot (7).
EXAMPLE
In this example we use an interface with MAC address 00:de:ad:be:af:00. This interface is not always physically connected. As soon as you
plug in the cable ypbind and autofs should be started. When you pull the cable they should be stopped. This can be reached with:
in file /etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg-eth-id-00:de:ad:be:af:00
...
STARTMODE=ifplugd
...
in dir /etc/sysconfig/network/ifservices-eth-id-00:de:ad:be:af:00/
S10portmap -> /etc/init.d/portmap
S20ypbind -> /etc/init.d/ypbind
S30autofs -> /etc/init.d/autofs
S20autofs -> /etc/init.d/autofs
K30ypbind -> /etc/init.d/ypbind
Now you have to disable the start of this services at boot time
chkconfig ypbind off
chkconfig autofs off
Notes:
You may call scripts/create-ifservices-directory [<interface_name>] to create a directory with the links from this example. This will cre-
ate the directory ifservices-<interface_name> or if no interface name was given ifservices-template.
Maybe you have to add also variable IFPLUGD_PRIORITY. For details about startmode ifplugd read ifup (8).
The service portmap had to be added because ypbind needs it. This service is still started at boot time because it does not need an active
network connection. But ypbind may now be started earlier as usual. Therefore we make sure that portmap is started before. Starting an
already running service again does not affect the service.
SEE ALSO ifup(8), ifcfg(5).
AUTHOR
Christian Zoz <zoz@suse.de>
sysconfig February 2005 IFSERVICES(5)