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- changequote(`@@@',`$$$')dnl
- @@@.TH DINIT-SERVICE "5" "$$$MONTH YEAR@@@" "Dinit $$$VERSION@@@" "Dinit \- service management system"
- .SH NAME
- Dinit service description files
- .\"
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .\"
- .ft CR
- /etc/dinit.d/\fIservice-name\fR, $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dinit.d/\fIservice-name\fR
- .ft
- .\"
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .\"
- The service description files for \fBDinit\fR each describe a service. The name
- of the file corresponds to the name of the service it describes.
- .LP
- Service description files specify the various attributes of a service. A
- service description file is named after the service it represents, and is
- a plain-text file with simple key-value format.
- The description files are located in a service description directory;
- See \fBdinit\fR(8) for more details of the default service description directories,
- and how and when service descriptions are loaded.
- .LP
- All services have a \fItype\fR and a set of \fIdependencies\fR. These are discussed
- in the following subsections. The type, dependencies, and other attributes are
- specified via property settings, the format of which are documented in the
- \fBSERVICE PROPERTIES\fR subsection, which also lists the available properties.
- .LP
- In addition to service properties, some meta-commands can be used within service
- description files.
- See the \fBMETA-COMMANDS\fR subsection for more information.
- .\"
- .SS SERVICE TYPES
- .\"
- There are five basic types of service:
- .IP \(bu
- \fBProcess\fR services. This kind of service runs a single supervised process; the process
- is started when the service is started and stopped when the service is stopped. If the
- process stops this also affects the service state, i.e. the service's started/stopped state is
- linked to the state of its associated process.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBBgprocess\fR services ("background process" services).
- This kind of service is similar to a regular process service, but is for a process which
- "daemonizes" or otherwise forks from the original process which starts it, and writes its
- new process ID to a file.
- Dinit will read the process ID from the file and, if running as the system init process or if the
- system provides the necessary facilities, can supervise the process just as for a \fBprocess\fR
- service.
- When starting a \fBbgprocess\fR service, Dinit will not consider the service to be fully started
- until the original process forks and terminates.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBScripted\fR services are services which are started and stopped by executing commands (which
- need not actually be scripts, despite the name).
- Once a command completes successfully the service is considered started (or stopped, as appropriate)
- by Dinit.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBInternal\fR services do not run as an external process at all.
- They can be started and stopped without any external action.
- They are useful for grouping other services (via service dependencies).
- .IP \(bu
- \fBTriggered\fR services are similar to internal processes, but an external trigger is required
- before they will start (i.e. Dinit will not consider them as started until the trigger is issued).
- The \fBdinitctl trigger\fR command can be used to trigger such a service; see \fBdinitctl\fR(8).
- .LP
- Independent of their type, the state of services can be linked to other
- services via dependency relationships, which are discussed in the next section.
- .\"
- .SS SERVICE DEPENDENCIES
- .\"
- A service dependency relationship, broadly speaking, specifies that for one
- service to run, another must also be running; when starting a service Dinit will wait until
- dependencies are satisfied before starting any processes associated with the service.
- The first service is the \fIdependent\fR service and the latter is the \fIdependency\fR
- service (we will henceforth generally refer to the the dependency relationship as the
- \fIrelationship\fR and use \fIdependency\fR to refer to the service).
- A dependency relationship is specified via the properties of the dependent.
- There are different relationship types, as follows:
- .IP \(bu
- A \fBneed\fR (or "hard") relationship specifies that the dependent must wait
- for the dependency to be started before it starts, and that the dependency
- must remain started while the dependent is started.
- Starting the dependent will start the dependency, and stopping the dependency will stop the
- dependent. This type of relationship is specified using a \fBdepends-on\fR property.
- .IP \(bu
- A \fBmilestone\fR relationship specifies that the dependency must
- start successfully before the dependent starts.
- Starting the dependent will therefore start the dependency.
- Once started, the relationship is satisfied; if the dependency then stops, it
- has no effect on the dependent.
- However, if the dependency fails to start or has its startup cancelled, the dependent will
- not start (and will return to the stopped state).
- This type of relationship is specified using a \fBdepends-ms\fR property.
- .IP \(bu
- A \fBwaits-for\fR relationship specifies that the dependency must
- start successfully, or fail to start, before the dependent starts.
- Starting the dependent will attempt to first start the dependency, but failure will
- not prevent the dependent from starting.
- If the dependency starts, stopping it will have no effect on the dependent.
- This type of relationship is specified using a \fBwaits-for\fR property.
- .LP
- See the \fBSERVICE ACTIVATION MODEL\fR section in \fBdinit\fR(8) for more details of how service
- dependencies affect starting and stopping of services.
- .\"
- .SS SERVICE PROPERTIES
- .\"
- This section described the various service properties that can be specified
- in a service description file. The properties specify the type of the service,
- dependencies of the service, and other service configuration.
- .LP
- Each line of the file can specify a single property value, expressed as `\fIproperty-name\fR =
- \fIvalue\fR', or `\fIproperty-name\fR: \fIvalue\fR'.
- There is currently no functional difference between either form of assignment, but note that some
- settings will override any previous setting of the same property whereas some effectively add a
- new distinct property, and it is recommended to use `=' or `:' (respectively) to distinguish them.
- A small selection of properties can have their value appended to, once set on a previous line,
- by specifying the property name again and using the `+=' operator in place of `=' (or `:').
- Comments begin with a hash mark (#) and extend to the end of the line (they must be
- separated from setting values by at least one whitespace character).
- Values are interpreted literally, except that:
- .\"
- .IP \(bu
- White space (comprised of spaces, tabs, etc) is collapsed to a single space, except
- leading or trailing white space around the property value, which is stripped.
- .IP \(bu
- For settings which specify a command with arguments, the value is interpreted as a
- series of tokens separated by white space, rather than a single string of characters.
- .IP \(bu
- Double quotes (") can be used around all or part of a property value, to
- prevent whitespace collapse and prevent interpretation of other special
- characters (such as "#") inside the quotes.
- The quote characters are not considered part of the property value.
- White space appearing inside quotes does not act as a delimiter for tokens.
- .IP \(bu
- A backslash (\\) can be used to escape the next character, causing it to
- lose any special meaning and become part of the property value (escaped newlines are an
- exception\(em\&they mark the end of a comment, and otherwise are treated as an unescaped space, allowing
- a property value to extend to the next line).
- A double backslash (\\\\) is collapsed to a single backslash within the parameter value.
- White space preceded by a backslash will not separate tokens.
- .LP
- Setting a property generally overrides any previous setting (from prior lines).
- However some properties are set additively; these include dependency relationships and \fBoptions\fR
- properties.
- .LP
- The following properties can be specified:
- .TP
- \fBtype\fR = {process | bgprocess | scripted | internal | triggered}
- Specifies the service type; see the \fBSERVICE TYPES\fR section.
- .TP
- \fBcommand\fR = \fIcommand-string\fR
- .TQ
- \fBcommand\fR += \fIcommand-string-addendum\fR
- Specifies the command, including command-line arguments, for starting the process.
- Applies only to \fBprocess\fR, \fBbgprocess\fR and \fBscripted\fR services.
- The value is subject to variable substitution (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- The `+=' operator can be used with this setting to append to a command set previously.
- .TP
- \fBstop\-command\fR = \fIcommand-string\fR
- .TQ
- \fBstop\-command\fR += \fIcommand-string-addendum\fR
- Specifies the command to stop the service (optional). Applicable to \fBprocess\fR, \fBbgprocess\fR and
- \fBscripted\fR services. If specified for \fBprocess\fR or \fBbgprocess\fR services, the "stop
- command" will be executed in order to stop the service, instead of signalling the service process.
- The value is subject to variable substitution (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- The `+=' operator can be used with this setting to append to a command set previously.
- .TP
- \fBworking\-dir\fR = \fIdirectory\fR
- Specifies the working directory for this service.
- For a scripted service, this affects both the start command and the stop command.
- The default is the directory containing the service description.
- The value is subject to variable substitution (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- .TP
- \fBrun\-as\fR = \fIuser-id\fR
- Specifies which user to run the process(es) for this service as.
- Specify as a username or numeric ID.
- If specified by name, the group for the process will also be set to the primary
- group of the specified user, and supplementary groups will be initialised (unless support
- for them is disabled) according to the system's group database.
- If specified by number, the group for the process will remain the same as that of the
- running \fBdinit\fR process, and all supplementary groups will be dropped (unless support
- has been disabled).
- .TP
- \fBenv\-file\fR = \fIfile\fR
- Specifies a file containing value assignments for environment variables, in the same
- format recognised by the \fBdinit\fR command's \fB\-\-env\-file\fR option (see \fBdinit\fR(8)).
- The file is read when the service is loaded, therefore values from it can be used in variable
- substitutions (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- Variable substitution is not performed on the \fBenv\-file\fR property value itself.
- If the path is not absolute, it is resolved relative to the directory containing the service
- description.
- .TP
- \fBrestart\fR = {yes | true | on-failure | no | false}
- Indicates whether the service should automatically restart if it stops, including due to
- unexpected process termination or a dependency stopping.
- Specifying \fBon-failure\fR for a \fBprocess\fR or \fBbgprocess\fR service causes the service to
- be restarted only when the exit status of the service process is non-zero, or if the process was
- terminated via a signal (other than SIGHUP, SIGINT, SIGUSR1, SIGUSR2 or SIGTERM, which indicate
- deliberate termination).
- Specifying \fBon-failure\fR for any other type of service is the same as specifying \fBfalse\fR
- (the service will not restart automatically).
- Note that if a service stops due to user request, automatic restart is inhibited.
- $$$changequote(`,')dnl
- ifelse(DEFAULT_AUTO_RESTART, ALWAYS,
- ``The default is to automatically restart.'',
- DEFAULT_AUTO_RESTART, ON_FAILURE,
- ``The default is to automatically restart only on process failure (\fBon-failure\fR).'',
- ``The default is to not automatically restart.'')
- changequote(`@@@',`$$$')dnl
- @@@.TP
- \fBsmooth\-recovery\fR = {yes | true | no | false}
- Applies only to \fBprocess\fR and \fBbgprocess\fR services.
- When set to true/yes, if the process terminates unexpectedly (i.e. without a stop order having been
- issued), an automatic process restart is performed, without first stopping any dependent services
- and without the service changing state.
- The normal restart restrictions (such as \fBrestart\-limit\-count\fR) apply.
- .TP
- \fBrestart\-delay\fR = \fIXXX.YYYY\fR
- Specifies the minimum time (in seconds) between automatic restarts.
- The default is 0.2 (200 milliseconds).
- .TP
- \fBrestart\-limit\-interval\fR = \fIXXX.YYYY\fR
- Sets the interval (in seconds) over which restarts are limited.
- If a process automatically restarts more than a certain number of times (specified by the
- \fBrestart-limit-count\fR setting) in this time interval, it will not be restarted again.
- The default value is 10 seconds.
- .TP
- \fBrestart\-limit\-count\fR = \fINNN\fR
- Specifies the maximum number of times that a service can automatically restart
- over the interval specified by \fBrestart\-limit\-interval\fR.
- Specify a value of 0 to disable the restart limit.
- The default value is 3.
- .TP
- \fBstart\-timeout\fR = \fIXXX.YYY\fR
- Specifies the time in seconds allowed for the service to start.
- If the service takes longer than this, its process group is sent a SIGINT signal
- and enters the "stopping" state (this may be subject to a stop timeout, as
- specified via \fBstop\-timeout\fR, after which the process group will be
- terminated via SIGKILL).
- The timeout period begins only when all dependencies have been satisfied.
- The default value is $$$DEFAULT_START_TIMEOUT@@@.
- A value of 0 allows unlimited start time.
- .TP
- \fBstop\-timeout\fR = \fIXXX.YYY\fR
- Specifies the time in seconds allowed for the service to stop.
- If the service takes longer than this, its process group is sent a SIGKILL signal
- which should cause it to terminate immediately.
- The timeout period begins only when all dependent services have already stopped.
- The default value is $$$DEFAULT_STOP_TIMEOUT@@@.
- A value of 0 allows unlimited stop time.
- .TP
- \fBpid\-file\fR = \fIpath-to-file\fR
- For \fBbgprocess\fR type services only; specifies the path of the file where
- daemon will write its process ID before detaching.
- Dinit will read the contents of this file when starting the service, once the initial process
- exits, and will supervise the process with the discovered process ID.
- Dinit may also send signals to the process ID to stop the service; if \fBdinit\fR runs as a
- privileged user the path should have appropriate permissions to permit abuse by untrusted
- unprivileged processes.
- .IP
- The value is subject to variable substitution (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- .TP
- \fBdepends\-on\fR: \fIservice-name\fR
- This service depends on the named service.
- Starting this service will start the named service; the command to start this service will not be executed
- until the named service has started.
- If the named service stops then this service will also be stopped.
- .TP
- \fBdepends\-ms\fR: \fIservice-name\fR
- This service has a "milestone" dependency on the named service. Starting this
- service will start the named service; this service will not start until the
- named service has started, and will fail to start if the named service does
- not start.
- Once the named (dependent) service reaches the started state, however, the
- dependency may stop without affecting the dependent service.
- .TP
- \fBwaits\-for\fR: \fIservice-name\fR
- When this service is started, wait for the named service to finish starting
- (or to fail starting) before commencing the start procedure for this service.
- Starting this service will automatically start the named service.
- If the named service fails to start, this service will start as usual (subject to
- other dependencies being met).
- .TP
- \fBdepends\-on.d\fR: \fIdirectory-path\fR
- For each file name in \fIdirectory-path\fR which does not begin with a dot,
- add a \fBdepends-on\fR dependency to the service with the same name.
- Note that contents of files in the specified directory are not significant; expected
- usage is to have symbolic links to the associated service description files,
- but this is not required.
- Failure to read the directory contents, or to find any of the services named within,
- is not considered fatal.
- .IP
- The directory path, if not absolute, is relative to the directory containing the service
- description file.
- .TP
- \fBdepends\-ms.d\fR: \fIdirectory-path\fR
- As for \fBdepends-on.d\fR, but with dependency type \fBdepends\-ms\fR.
- .TP
- \fBwaits\-for.d\fR: \fIdirectory-path\fR
- As for \fBdepends-on.d\fR, but with dependency type \fBwaits\-for\fR.
- .TP
- \fBafter\fR: \fIservice-name\fR
- When starting this service, if the named service is also starting, wait for the named service
- to finish starting before bringing this service up. This is similar to a \fBwaits\-for\fR
- dependency except no dependency relationship is implied; if the named service is not starting,
- starting this service will not cause it to start (nor wait for it in that case).
- It does not by itself cause the named service to be loaded (if loaded later, the "after"
- relationship will be enforced from that point).
- .TP
- \fBbefore\fR: \fIservice-name\fR
- When starting the named service, if this service is also starting, wait for this service
- to finish starting before bringing the named service up. This is largely equivalent to specifying
- an \fBafter\fR relationship to this service from the named service.
- However, it does not by itself cause the named service to be loaded (if loaded later, the "before"
- relationship will be enforced from that point).
- .TP
- \fBchain\-to\fR = \fIservice-name\fR
- When this service terminates (i.e. starts successfully, and then stops of its
- own accord), the named service should be started.
- Note that the named service is not loaded until that time; naming an invalid service will
- not cause this service to fail to load.
- .IP
- This can be used for a service that supplies an interactive "recovery mode"
- for another service; once the user exits the recovery shell, the primary
- service (as named via this setting) will then start.
- It also supports multi-stage system startup where later service description files reside on
- a separate filesystem that is mounted during the first stage; such service
- descriptions will not be found at initial start, and so cannot be started
- directly, but can be chained via this directive.
- .IP
- The chain is not executed if the initial service was explicitly stopped,
- stopped due to a dependency stopping (for any reason), if it will restart
- (including due to a dependent restarting), or if its process terminates
- abnormally or with an exit status indicating an error.
- However, if the \fBalways-chain\fR option is set the chain is started regardless of the
- reason and the status of this service termination.
- .TP
- \fBsocket\-listen\fR = \fIsocket-path\fR
- Pre-open a socket for the service and pass it to the service using the
- \fBsystemd\fR activation protocol.
- This by itself does not give so called "socket activation", but does allow any
- process trying to connect to the specified socket to do so immediately after
- the service is started (even before the service process is properly prepared
- to accept connections).
- .IP
- The path value is subject to variable substitution (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- .TP
- \fBsocket\-permissions\fR = \fIoctal-permissions-mask\fR
- Gives the permissions for the socket specified using \fBsocket\-listen\fR.
- Normally this will be 600 (user access only), 660 (user and group
- access), or 666 (all users).
- The default is 666.
- .TP
- \fBsocket\-uid\fR = {\fInumeric-user-id\fR | \fIusername\fR}
- Specifies the user (name or numeric ID) that should own the activation socket.
- If \fBsocket\-uid\fR is specified as a name without also specifying \fBsocket\-gid\fR, then
- the socket group is the primary group of the specified user (as found in the
- system user database, normally \fI/etc/passwd\fR).
- If the \fBsocket\-uid\fR setting is not provided, the socket will be owned by the user id of the \fBdinit\fR process.
- .TP
- \fBsocket\-gid\fR = {\fInumeric-group-id\fR | \fIgroup-name\fR}
- Specifies the group of the activation socket. See discussion of \fBsocket\-uid\fR.
- .TP
- \fBterm\-signal\fR = {\fBnone\fR | \fIsignal-name\fR}
- Specifies the signal to send to the process when requesting it to terminate (applies to `process'
- and `bgprocess' services only).
- Signal names are specified as the POSIX signal name without the \fBSIG\fR- prefix.
- At least \fBHUP\fR, \fBTERM\fR, and \fBKILL\fR are supported (use \fBdinitctl signal \-\-list\fR
- for the full list of supported signals).
- The default is TERM (the SIGTERM signal).
- See also the discussion of \fBstop\-timeout\fR.
- .TP
- \fBready\-notification\fR = {\fBpipefd:\fR\fIfd-number\fR | \fBpipevar:\fR\fIenv-var-name\fR}
- Specifies the mechanism, if any, by which a process service will notify that it is ready
- (successfully started).
- If not specified, a process service is considered started as soon as it has begun execution.
- The two options are:
- .RS
- .IP \(bu
- \fBpipefd:\fR\fIfd-number\fR \(em the service will write a message to the specified file descriptor,
- which \fBdinit\fR sets up as the write end of a pipe before execution.
- This mechanism is compatible with the S6 supervision suite.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBpipevar:\fR\fIenv-var-name\fR \(em the service will write a message to file descriptor identified
- using the contents of the specified environment variable, which will be set by \fBdinit\fR before
- execution to a file descriptor (chosen arbitrarily) attached to the write end of a pipe.
- .RE
- .TP
- \fBlog\-type\fR = {file | buffer | pipe | none}
- Specifies how the output of this service is logged.
- This setting is valid only for process-based services (including \fBscripted\fR services).
- .RS
- .IP \(bu
- \fBfile\fR: output will be written to a file; see the \fBlogfile\fR setting.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBbuffer\fR: output will be buffered in memory, up to a limit specified via the
- \fBlog\-buffer\-size\fR setting.
- The buffer contents can be examined via the \fBdinitctl\fR(8) \fBcatlog\fR subcommand.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBpipe\fR: output will be written to a pipe, and may be consumed by another service
- (see the \fBconsumer\-of\fR setting); note that, if output is not consumed promptly, the pipe buffer
- may become full which may cause the service process to stall.
- .IP \(bu
- \fBnone\fR: output is discarded.
- .RE
- .IP
- The default log type is \fBnone\fR, unless the \fBlogfile\fR setting is specified in which case
- the default log type is \fBfile\fR. For \fBpipe\fR (and \fBbuffer\fR, which uses a pipe internally)
- note that the pipe created may outlive the service process and be re-used if the service is stopped
- and restarted.
- .\"
- .TP
- \fBlogfile\fR = \fIlog-file-path\fR
- Specifies the log file for the service.
- Output from the service process (standard output and standard error streams) will be appended to this file,
- which will be created if it does not already exist. The file ownership and permissions are adjusted
- according to the \fBlogfile\-uid\fR, \fBlogfile\-gid\fR and \fBlogfile\-permissions\fR settings.
- This setting has no effect if the service is set to run on the console (via the \fBruns\-on\-console\fR,
- \fBstarts\-on\-console\fR, or \fBshares\-console\fR options).
- The value is subject to variable substitution (see \fBVARIABLE SUBSTITUTION\fR).
- Note that if the directory in which the logfile resides does not exist (or is not otherwise accessible to
- \fBdinit\fR) when the service is started, the service will not start successfully.
- If this settings is specified and \fBlog\-type\fR is not specified or is currently \fBnone\fR, then
- the log type will be changed to \fBfile\fR.
- .TP
- \fBlogfile\-permissions\fR = \fIoctal-permissions-mask\fR
- Gives the permissions for the log file specified using \fBlogfile\fR. Normally this will be 600 (user access
- only), 640 (also readable by the group), or 644 (readable by all users).
- If the log file already exists when the service starts, its permissions will be changed in accordance with
- the value of this setting.
- The default is value 600 (accessible to only the owning user).
- .TP
- \fBlogfile\-uid\fR = {\fInumeric-user-id\fR | \fIusername\fR}
- Specifies the user (name or numeric ID) that should own the log file.
- If \fBlogfile\-uid\fR is specified as a name without also specifying \fBlogfile\-gid\fR, then
- the log file group is the primary group of the specified user (as found in the
- system user database, normally \fI/etc/passwd\fR).
- If the log file already exists when the service starts, its ownership will be changed in accordance with
- the value of this setting.
- The default value is the user id of the \fBdinit\fR process.
- .TP
- \fBlogfile\-gid\fR = {\fInumeric-group-id\fR | \fIgroup-name\fR}
- Specifies the group of the log file. See discussion of \fBlogfile\-uid\fR.
- .TP
- \fBlog\-buffer\-size\fR = \fIsize-in-bytes\fR
- If the log type (see \fBlog\-type\fR) is set to \fBbuffer\fR, this setting controls the maximum
- size of the buffer used to store process output. If the buffer becomes full, further output from
- the service process will be discarded.
- .TP
- \fBconsumer\-of\fR = \fIservice-name\fR
- Specifies that this service consumes (as its standard input) the output of another service.
- For example, this allows this service to act as a logging agent for another service.
- The named service must be a process-based service with \fBlog\-type\fR set to \fBpipe\fR.
- This setting is only valid for \fBprocess\fR and \fBbgprocess\fR services.
- .TP
- \fBoptions\fR: \fIoption\fR...
- Specifies various options for this service. See the \fBOPTIONS\fR section.
- .TP
- \fBload\-options\fR: \fIload_option\fR...
- Specifies options for interpreting other settings when loading this service description.
- Currently there are two available options. One is \fBexport-passwd-vars\fR, which
- specifies that the environment variables `\fBUSER\fR', `\fBLOGNAME\fR' (same as
- `\fBUSER\fR'), `\fBHOME\fR', `\fBSHELL\fR', `\fBUID\fR', and `\fBGID\fR' should
- be exported into the service's load environment (that is, overriding any global
- environment including the global environment file, but being overridable by the
- service's environment file). The other is \fBexport-service-name\fR, which will
- set the environment variable `\fBDINIT_SERVICE\fR' containing the name of the
- current service.
- .TP
- \fBinittab\-id\fR = \fIid-string\fR
- When this service is started, if this setting (or the \fBinittab\-line\fR setting) has a
- specified value, an entry will be created in the system "utmp" database which tracks
- processes and logged-in users.
- Typically this database is used by the "who" command to list logged-in users.
- The entry will be cleared when the service terminates.
- .IP
- The \fBinittab\-id\fR setting specifies the "inittab id" to be written in the entry for
- the process.
- The value is normally quite meaningless.
- However, it should be distinct (or unset) for separate processes.
- It is typically limited to a very short length.
- .IP
- The "utmp" database is mostly a historical artifact.
- Access to it on some systems is prone to denial-of-service by unprivileged users.
- It is therefore recommended that this setting not be used.
- However, "who" and similar utilities may not work correctly without this setting
- (or \fBinittab\-line\fR) enabled appropriately.
- .IP
- This setting has no effect if Dinit was not built with support for writing to the "utmp"
- database. It applies only to \fBprocess\fR services.
- .TP
- \fBinittab\-line\fR = \fItty-name-string\fR
- This specifies the tty line that will be written to the "utmp" database when this service
- is started.
- Normally, for a terminal login service, it would match the terminal device name on which
- the login process runs, without the "/dev/" prefix.
- .IP
- See the description of the \fBinittab\-id\fR setting for details.
- .TP
- \fBrlimit\-nofile\fR = \fIresource-limits\fR
- Specifies the number of file descriptors that a process may have open simultaneously.
- See the \fBRESOURCE LIMITS\fR section.
- .TP
- \fBrlimit\-core\fR = \fIresource-limits\fR
- Specifies the maximum size of the core dump file that will be generated for the process if it
- crashes (in a way that would result in a core dump).
- See the \fBRESOURCE LIMITS\fR section.
- .TP
- \fBrlimit\-data\fR = \fIresource-limits\fR
- Specifies the maximum size of the data segment for the process, including statically allocated
- data and heap allocations.
- Precise meaning may vary between operating systems.
- See the \fBRESOURCE LIMITS\fR section.
- .TP
- \fBrlimit\-addrspace\fR = \fIresource-limits\fR
- Specifies the maximum size of the address space of the process.
- See the \fBRESOURCE LIMITS\fR section.
- Note that some operating systems (notably, OpenBSD) do not support this limit; the
- setting will be ignored on such systems.
- .TP
- \fBrun\-in\-cgroup\fR = \fIcgroup-path\fR
- Run the service process(es) in the specified cgroup (see \fBcgroups\fR(7)).
- The cgroup is specified as a path; if it has a leading slash, the remainder of the path is
- interpreted as relative to \fI/sys/fs/cgroup\fR, and otherwise the entire path is interpreted
- relative to the cgroup in which \fBdinit\fR is running (as determined at startup or specified
- by options).
- The latter can only be used if there is only a single cgroup hierarchy (either the cgroups v2
- hierarchy with no cgroups v1 hierarchies, or a single cgroups v1 hierarchy).
- .IP
- Note that due to the "no internal processes" rule in cgroups v2, a relative path must typically
- begin with ".." if cgroups v2 are used.
- .IP
- The named cgroup must already exist prior to the service starting; it will not be created by
- \fBdinit\fR.
- .IP
- This setting is only available if \fBdinit\fR was built with cgroups support.
- .\"
- .SS OPTIONS
- .\"
- These options are specified via the \fBoptions\fR parameter.
- .\"
- .TP
- \fBruns\-on\-console\fR
- Specifies that this service uses the console; its input and output should be
- directed to the console (or precisely, to the device to which \fBdinit\fR's standard
- output stream is connected).
- A service running on the console prevents other services from running on the
- console (they will queue for the console).
- .IP
- Proper operation of this option (and related options) assumes that \fBdinit\fR
- is itself attached correctly to the console device (or a terminal, in which case
- that terminal will be used as the "console").
- .IP
- The \fIinterrupt\fR key (normally control-C) may be active for process / scripted
- services that run on the console, depending on terminal configuration and operating-system
- specifics.
- The interrupt signal (SIGINT), however, is masked by default (but see \fBunmask\-intr\fR).
- .TP
- \fBstarts\-on\-console\fR
- Specifies that this service uses the console during service startup.
- This is identical to \fBruns\-on\-console\fR except that the console will be released
- (available for running other services) once the service has started.
- It is applicable only for \fBbgprocess\fR and \fBscripted\fR services.
- .IP
- As for the \fBruns\-on\-console\fR option, the \fIinterrupt\fR key will be enabled
- while the service has the console.
- .TP
- \fBshares\-console\fR
- Specifies that this service should be given access to the console (input and output
- will be connected to the console), but that it should not exclusively hold the
- console. A service given access to the console in this way will not delay the startup of services
- which require exclusive access to the console (see \fBstarts\-on\-console\fR,
- \fBruns\-on\-console\fR) nor will it be itself delayed if such services are already running.
- .IP
- This is mutually exclusive with both \fBstarts\-on\-console\fR and \fBruns\-on\-console\fR;
- setting this option unsets both those options, and setting either of those options unsets
- this option.
- .TP
- \fBunmask\-intr\fR
- For services that run or start on the console, specifies that the terminal interrupt signal
- (SIGINT, normally invoked by control-C) should be unmasked.
- Handling of an interrupt is determined by the service process, but typically will
- cause it to terminate.
- This option may therefore be used to allow a service to be terminated by the user via
- a keypress combination.
- In combination with \fBskippable\fR, it may allow service startup to be skipped.
- .IP
- A service with this option will typically also have the \fBstart\-interruptible\fR option
- set.
- .IP
- Note that whether an interrupt can be generated, and the key combination required to do so,
- depends on the operating system's handling of the console device and, if it is a terminal,
- how the terminal is configured; see \fBstty\fR(1).
- .IP
- Note also that a process may choose to mask or unmask the interrupt signal of its own accord,
- once it has started.
- Shells, in particular, may unmask the signal; it might not be possible to reliably run a shell
- script on the console without allowing a user to interrupt it.
- .TP
- \fBstarts\-rwfs\fR
- This service mounts the root filesystem read/write (or at least mounts the
- normal writable filesystems for the system).
- This prompts Dinit to attempt to create its control socket, if it has not already managed to do so,
- and similarly log boot time to the system \fBwtmp\fR(5) database (if supported) if not yet done.
- This option may be specified on multiple services, which may be useful if the \fBwtmp\fR database becomes
- writable at a different stage than the control socket location becomes writable, for example.
- If the control socket has already been created, this option currently causes Dinit to check that
- the socket "file" still exists and re-create it if not. It is not recommended to rely on this
- behaviour.
- .TP
- \fBstarts\-log\fR
- This service starts the system log daemon.
- Dinit will begin logging via the \fI/dev/log\fR socket.
- .TP
- \fBpass\-cs\-fd\fR
- Pass an open Dinit control socket to the process when launching it (the
- \fIDINIT_CS_FD\fR environment variable will be set to the file descriptor of
- the socket).
- This allows the service to issue commands to Dinit even if the regular control socket is not available yet.
- .IP
- Using this option has security implications! The service which receives the
- control socket must close it before launching any untrusted processes.
- You should not use this option unless the service is designed to receive a Dinit
- control socket.
- .TP
- \fBstart\-interruptible\fR
- Indicates that this service can have its startup interrupted (cancelled), by sending it the SIGINT signal.
- If service state changes such that this service will stop, but it is currently starting, and this option
- is set, then Dinit will attempt to interrupt it rather than waiting for its startup to complete.
- This is meaningful only for \fBbgprocess\fR and \fBscripted\fR services.
- .TP
- \fBskippable\fR
- For scripted services, indicates that if the service startup process terminates
- via an interrupt signal (SIGINT), then the service should be considered started.
- Note that if the interrupt was issued by Dinit to cancel startup, the service
- will instead be considered stopped.
- .IP
- This can be combined with options such as \fBstarts\-on\-console\fR to allow
- skipping certain non-essential services (such as filesystem checks) using the
- \fIinterrupt\fR key (typically control-C).
- .TP
- \fBsignal\-process-only\fR
- Signal the service process only, rather than its entire process group, whenever
- sending it a signal for any reason.
- .TP
- \fBalways\-chain\fR
- Alters behaviour of the \fBchain-to\fR property, forcing the chained service to
- always start on termination of this service (instead of only when this service
- terminates with an exit status indicating success).
- .TP
- \fBkill\-all\-on\-stop\fR
- Before stopping this service, send a TERM signal and then (after a short pause) a
- KILL signal to all other processes in the system, forcibly terminating them.
- This option is intended to allow system shutdown scripts to run without any possible
- interference from "leftover" or orphaned processes (for example, unmounting file systems usually
- requires that the file systems are no longer in use).
- .IP
- This option must be used with care since the signal broadcast does not discriminate and
- potentially kills other services (or their shutdown scripts); a strict dependency ordering
- is suggested, i.e. every other service should either be a (possibly transitive) dependency or
- dependent of the service with this option set.
- .IP
- This option can be used for scripted and internal services only.
- .\"
- .SS RESOURCE LIMITS
- .\"
- There are several settings for specifying process resource limits: \fBrlimit\-nofile\fR,
- \fBrlimit\-core\fR, \fBrlimit\-data\fR and \fBrlimit\-addrspace\fR.
- See the descriptions of each above.
- These settings place a limit on resource usage directly by the process.
- Note that resource limits are inherited by subprocesses, but that usage of a resource
- and subprocess are counted separately (in other words, a process can effectively bypass
- its resource limits by spawning a subprocess and allocating further resources within it).
- .LP
- Resources have both a \fIhard\fR and \fIsoft\fR limit.
- The soft limit is the effective limit, but note that a process can raise its soft limit up
- to the hard limit for any given resource.
- Therefore the soft limit acts more as a sanity-check; a process can exceed the soft limit
- only by deliberately raising it first.
- .LP
- Resource limits are specified in the following format:
- .sp
- .RS
- \fIsoft-limit\fR:\fIhard-limit\fR
- .RE
- .sp
- Either the soft limit or the hard limit can be omitted (in which case it will be unchanged).
- A limit can be specified as a dash, `\fB\-\fR', in which case the limit will be removed.
- If only one value is specified with no colon separator, it affects both the soft and hard limit.
- .\"
- .SS VARIABLE SUBSTITUTION
- .\"
- Some service properties specify a path to a file or directory, or a command line.
- For these properties, the specified value may contain one or more environment
- variable names, each preceded by a single `\fB$\fR' character, as in `\fB$NAME\fR'.
- In each case the value of the named environment variable will be substituted.
- The name must begin with a non-punctuation, non-space, non-digit character, and ends
- before the first control character, space, or punctuation character other than `\fB_\fR'.
- To avoid substitution, a single `\fB$\fR' can be escaped with a second, as in `\fB$$\fR'.
- .LP
- Variable substitution also supports a limited subset of shell syntax. You can use curly
- braces to enclose the variable, as in `\fB${NAME}\fR'.
- Limited parameter expansion is also supported, specifically the forms `\fB${NAME:\-word}\fR'
- (substitute `\fBword\fR' if variable is unset or empty), `\fB${NAME\-word}\fR' (substitute
- `\fBword\fR' if variable is unset), `\fB${NAME:+word}\fR' (substitute `\fBword\fR' if variable is
- set and non\-empty), and `\fB${NAME+word}\fR' (substitute `\fBword\fR' if variable is set).
- Unlike in shell expansion, the substituted \fBword\fR does not itself undergo expansion and
- cannot contain closing brace characters or whitespace, even if quoted.
- .LP
- Note that by default, command-line variable substitution occurs after splitting the line into
- separate arguments and so
- a single environment variable cannot be used to add multiple arguments to a command line.
- If a designated variable is not defined, it is replaced with an empty (zero-length) string, possibly producing a
- zero-length argument.
- To alter this behaviour use a slash after \fB$\fR, as in `\fB$/NAME\fR'; the expanded value will then
- be split into several arguments separated by whitespace or, if the value is empty or consists only
- of whitespace, will collapse (instead of producing an empty or whitespace argument).
- .LP
- Variable substitution occurs when the service is loaded.
- Therefore, it is typically not useful for dynamically changing service parameters (including
- command line) based on a variable that is inserted into \fBdinit\fR's environment once it is
- running (for example via \fBdinitctl setenv\fR).
- .LP
- The effective environment for variable substitution in setting values matches the environment supplied to the process
- for a service when it is launched. The priority of environment variables, from highest to lowest, for both is:
- .IP \(bu
- variables from the service \fBenv\-file\fR
- .IP \(bu
- variables set by the \fBexport\-passwd\-vars\fR and \fBexport\-service\-name\fR load options
- .IP \(bu
- the process environment of \fBdinit\fR (which is established on launch by the process environment of the
- parent, amended by loading the environment file (if any) as specified in \fBdinit\fR(8), and further
- amended via \fBdinitctl setenv\fR commands or equivalent).
- .LP
- Note that since variable substitution is performed on service load, the values seen by a service process may differ from those
- used for substitution, if they have been changed in the meantime.
- Using environment variable values in service commands and parameters can be used as means to
- provide easily-adjustable service configuration, but is not ideal for this purpose and alternatives
- should be considered.
- .\"
- .SS META-COMMANDS
- .\"
- A number of meta-commands can be used in service description files.
- A meta-command is indicated by an 'at' sign, \fB@\fR, at the beginning of the line (possibly preceded by whitespace).
- Arguments to a meta-command follow on the same line and are interpreted as for setting values.
- .LP
- The following commands are available:
- .TP
- \fB@include\fR \fIpath\fR
- Include the contents of another file, specified via its full path.
- If the specified file does not exist, an error is produced.
- .TP
- \fB@include\-opt\fR \fIpath\fR
- As for \fB@include\fR, but produces no error if the named file does not exist.
- .\"
- .SH EXAMPLES
- .LP
- Here is an example service description for the \fBmysql\fR database server.
- It has a dependency on the \fBrcboot\fR service (not shown) which is
- expected to have set up the system to a level suitable for basic operation.
- .sp
- .RS
- .nf
- .gcolor blue
- .ft CR
- # mysqld service
- type = process
- command = /usr/bin/mysqld --user=mysql
- logfile = /var/log/mysqld.log
- smooth-recovery = true
- restart = false
- depends-on = rcboot # Basic system services must be ready
- .ft
- .gcolor
- .RE
- .fi
- .LP
- Here is an examples for a filesystem check "service", run by a script
- (\fI/etc/dinit.d/scripts/rootfscheck.sh\fR).
- The script may need to reboot the system, but the control socket may not have been
- created, so it uses the \fBpass-cs-fd\fR option to allow the \fBreboot\fR command
- to issue control commands to Dinit.
- It runs on the console, so that output is visible and the process can be interrupted
- using control-C, in which case the check is skipped but dependent services continue to start.
- .sp
- .RS
- .nf
- .gcolor blue
- .ft CR
- # rootfscheck service
- type = scripted
- command = /etc/dinit.d/scripts/rootfscheck.sh
- restart = false
- options = starts-on-console pass-cs-fd
- options = start-interruptible skippable
- depends-on = early-filesystems # /proc and /dev
- depends-on = device-node-daemon
- .ft
- .gcolor
- .fi
- .RE
- .sp
- More examples are provided with the Dinit distribution.
- .\"
- .SH AUTHOR
- Dinit, and this manual, were written by Davin McCall.
- $$$dnl
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