CRM company dumps Microsoft, remakes itself with LAMP


 
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Old 01-23-2008
CRM company dumps Microsoft, remakes itself with LAMP

Wed, 23 Jan 2008 21:02:00 GMT
Etelos, launched in pre-bubble 1999 as a CRM services outfit, has remade itself as a Web 2.0 company with the help of open source software. Today, Etelos offers hosted CRM applications that weave into Google apps, Windows Live, and even iPods. Leaving Microsoft behind, and all the licensing restrictions that came with it, made all the difference, says CTO and founder Danny Kolke.


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MACH_INIT(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					      MACH_INIT(8)

NAME
mach_init -- Mach service naming (bootstrap) daemon SYNOPSIS
mach_init [-D] [-d] [-F] [-r name-in-existing-server] DESCRIPTION
mach_init is a daemon that maintains various mappings between service names and the Mach ports that provide access to those services. Clients of mach_init can register and lookup services, create new mapping subsets, and associate services with declared servers. The mach_init daemon will also be responsible for launching (and/or re-launching) those service providing servers when attempts to use one or more of the associated services is detected. The options are as follows: -D When the -D option is specified, mach_init starts in normal (non-debug) mode. Logging is minimal (only security-related and process launch failures are logged). Core dumps are disabled for launched servers. This is the default. -d When the -d option is specified, mach_init starts in debug mode. Logging is extensive. Core dumps will be taken for any launched servers that crash. -F When the -F option is specified, mach_init forks during initialization so that it doesn't have to be put in the background manually by the caller. -r Using the -r option tells mach_init to register itself in a previously running copy of mach_init under the service name name-in-existing-server. This is most useful when debugging new instances of mach_init itself, but can also be used for robustness or to allow the subsequent mach_init processes to run as a non-root user. As mach_init is often used to launch servers, this could be more secure. However, mach_init will not allow a server declaration to specify a user id different than that of the requesting client (unless the client is running as root). So it shouldn't be required for a secure configuration. Access to mach_init is provided through the bootstrap series of RPC APIs over service ports published by mach_init itself. Each Mach task has an assigned bootstrap port retrieved via task_get_bootstrap_port(). These bootstrap port registrations are inherited across fork(). The service registrations are grouped into subsets, providing a level of security. Only processes with access to the subset's bootstrap port will be able to register/lookup Mach ports within that subset. Lookups from within a subset will search the subset first, then move on to its parent, and then its grand-parent, etc... until a string name match is found or the top of the bootstrap tree is reached. Subsets are sometimes associated with login sessions to protect session-specific ports from being exposed outside the session. The first instance of mach_init is responsible for launching the traditional BSD process control initialization daemon (/sbin/init). SAMPLE USAGE
mach_init -d -r com.company.bootstrap mach_init will start in debug mode, and register itself in an already running instance of mach_init under the service name com.company.boot- strap. NOTE
Sending a SIGHUP to a running mach_init will toggle debug mode. SEE ALSO
init(8) Mac OS X March 20, 2002 Mac OS X