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Full Discussion: Creating script in rc.d
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Creating script in rc.d Post 303042980 by anaigini45 on Wednesday 15th of January 2020 12:39:34 AM
Old 01-15-2020
Creating script in rc.d

Hi,


I have created customized scripts to start httpd and postgres (For CentOS 6) in /etc/init.d. However for it to work even after reboot, I have to put the script in /etc/rc.d/rc0.d, rc1.d, etc.


Code:
[root@dev3-pdx rc.d]# ls -lrt
total 60
-rwxr-xr-x  1 root root 20199 Oct  4  2017 rc.sysinit
-rwxr-xr-x  1 root root   220 Oct  4  2017 rc.local
-rwxr-xr-x  1 root root  2617 Oct  4  2017 rc
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc1.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc0.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc6.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc2.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc5.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc4.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 May 14  2019 rc3.d
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root  4096 Jan 15 11:49 init.d
[root@dev3-pdx rc.d]#

However, the naming convention for the scripts, for eg, in the directory rc0.d is like this :


Code:
[root@dev3-pdx rc0.d]# ls
K01certmonger  K10cups               K15svnserve        K50kdump       K73winbind           K75quota_nld       K84wpa_supplicant  K88rsyslog      K92iptables      K99rngd
K01smartd      K10psacct             K16abrt-ccpp       K50xinetd      K74acpid             K75udev-post       K85mdmonitor       K88sssd         K92pppoe-server  K99sysstat
K02oddjobd     K10saslauthd          K16abrtd           K60crond       K74haldaemon         K76ypbind          K85messagebus      K89netconsole   K95firstboot     S00killall
K03rhnsd       K15htcacheclean       K25sshd            K60nfs         K74ntpd              K83bluetooth       K87irqbalance      K89portreserve  K95rdma          S01halt
K04osad        K15htcacheclean-myeg  K30postfix         K61nfs-rdma    K75blk-availability  K83nfslock         K87restorecond     K89rdisc        K99cpuspeed
K05atd         K15httpd              K30spice-vdagentd  K69rpcsvcgssd  K75netfs             K83rpcgssd         K87rpcbind         K90network      K99lvm2-monitor
K05wdaemon     K15httpd-myeg         K50dnsmasq         K72autofs      K75ntpdate           K84NetworkManager  K88auditd          K92ip6tables    K99oscap-scan
[root@dev3-pdx rc0.d]#

How do I know what number to put for my script? Like K16.....etc.
 

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rc0(8)							      System Manager's Manual							    rc0(8)

NAME
rc0 - Runs command script executed when stopping the system SYNOPSIS
rc0 DESCRIPTION
The rc0 script contains run commands that enable a smooth shutdown and bring the system to a single-user state; run levels 0 and s. In addition to commands listed in within the script itself, rc0 contains instructions to run commands found in the /sbin/rc0.d directory. The script defines the conditions under which the commands execute; some commands run if the system is being shut down while others run if the system is being shut down and rebooted to single user. By convention, files in the /sbin/rc0.d directory begin with either the letter "K" or the letter "S" and are followed by a two-digit number and a filename, for example: K00enlogin K05lpd K60cron K30nfs In general, the system starts commands that begin with the letter "S" and stops commands that begin with the letter "K." The numbering of commands in the /sbin/rc0.d directory is important since the numbers are sorted and the commands are run in ascending order. Files in the /sbin/rc0.d directory are normally links to files in the /etc/init.d directory. An entry in the inittab file causes the system to execute the rc0 script, for example: ss:Ss:wait:/sbin/rc0 shutdown < /dev/console > /dev/console 2>&1 s0:0:wait:/sbin/rc0 off < /dev/console > /dev/console 2>&1 The following operations are typical of those that result from executing the rc0 script and the commands located in the /sbin/rc0.d direc- tory: Notify users that the system is shutting down. Sync the disks Stop system services and daemons Stop processes Kill processes Unmount file systems Invoke init if the system is being shut down to single user The killall command sends a SIGTERM signal to stop running processes; SIGKILL follows to kill all processes except the process which initi- ated the call. The umount -a command unmounts all file systems except the root file system. FILES
Specifies the command path Specifies the directory of commands that corresponds to the run level RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: init(8), killall(8), rc2(8), rc3(8), shutdown(8) delim off rc0(8)
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