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- changequote(`@@@',`$$$')dnl
- @@@.TH DINIT "8" "$$$MONTH YEAR@@@" "Dinit $$$VERSION@@@" "Dinit \- service management system"
- .SH NAME
- dinit \- supervise processes and manage services
- .\"
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .\"
- .nh
- .\"
- .HP
- .B dinit
- [OPTION]... [\fIservice-name\fR]...
- .\"
- .hy
- .\"
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .\"
- \fBDinit\fR is a process supervisor and service manager which can also
- function as a system \fBinit\fR process.
- It has a small but functional feature set, offering service dependency handling, parallel startup,
- automatic rate-limited restart of failing processes, and service control functions.
- .LP
- Dinit can be run as a system instance (when run as the root user or when
- specified via command line parameter) or as a user instance.
- This affects the default paths used to locate certain files.
- .LP
- When run as PID 1, the first process, Dinit by default acts as a system manager and
- shuts down or reboots the system on request (including on receipt of certain signals).
- This is currently fully supported only on Linux.
- See \fBRUNNING AS SYSTEM MANAGER / PRIMARY INIT\fR.
- .LP
- Dinit reads service descriptions from files located in a service
- description directory, normally one of \fI/etc/dinit.d\fR, \fI/run/dinit.d\fR,
- \fI/usr/local/lib/dinit.d\fR and \fI/lib/dinit.d\fR for the system instance
- or \fI$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dinit.d\fR, \fI$HOME/.config/dinit.d\fR, \fI/etc/dinit.d/user\fR,
- \fI/usr/lib/dinit.d/user\fR and \fI/usr/local/lib/dinit.d/user\fR when run as a user process.
- See \fBSERVICE DESCRIPTION FILES\fR for details of the service description format.
- .\"
- .SH OPTIONS
- .TP
- \fB\-d\fR \fIdir\fP, \fB\-\-services\-dir\fR \fIdir\fP
- Specifies \fIdir\fP as the directory containing service definition files.
- This can be specified multiple times for multiple service directories.
- .IP
- The default service directories are listed in the \fBFILES\fR section.
- Note that the default directories will not be searched when the \fB\-d\fR/\fB\-\-services\-dir\fR
- option is specified.
- .TP
- \fB\-e\fR \fIfile\fP, \fB\-\-env\-file\fR \fIfile\fP
- Read initial environment from \fIfile\fP.
- For the system init process, the default is \fI/etc/dinit/environment\fR; see \fBFILES\fR.
- .TP
- \fB\-p\fR \fIpath\fP, \fB\-\-socket\-path\fR \fIpath\fP
- Specifies \fIpath\fP as the path to the control socket used to listen for
- commands from the \fBdinitctl\fR program.
- The default for the system service manager is usually \fI/dev/dinitctl\fR (but can be configured at build time).
- For a user service manager the default is either \fI$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/dinitctl\fR
- or \fI$HOME/.dinitctl\fR, depending on whether \fI$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR\fR is set.
- .TP
- \fB\-F\fR \fIfd\fP, \fB\-\-ready\-fd\fR \fIfd\fP
- Specifies \fIfd\fP as the file descriptor number to report readiness to.
- Readiness means that the control socket is open and the service manager is
- ready to accept commands (e.g. via \fBdinitctl\fR). It does not mean that
- services are finished starting yet. The path to the currently open control
- socket is written on the file descriptor.
- .TP
- \fB\-l\fR \fIpath\fP, \fB\-\-log\-file\fR \fIpath\fP
- Species \fIpath\fP as the path to the log file, to which Dinit will log status
- and error messages.
- Using this option inhibits logging via the syslog facility, however, all logging messages are
- duplicated as usual to the console (as long as \fB\-\-quiet\fR has not also been specified).
- Note that when running as the system init, Dinit will continue if it cannot open the specified
- file, and will attempt to open it again once the root file system is writable.
- If not running as the system init and the file cannot be opened, Dinit will immediately exit
- with an error.
- .TP
- \fB\-s\fR, \fB\-\-system\fR
- Run as the system service manager.
- This is the default if invoked as the root user.
- This option affects the default service definition directory and control socket path.
- .TP
- \fB\-m\fR, \fB\-\-system\-mgr\fR
- Run as the system manager (perform operations directly related to machine startup
- and shutdown).
- This is the default when running as process ID 1.
- The main user-visible effect of this option is to invoke the \fB$$$SHUTDOWN_PREFIX@@@shutdown\fR program when a shutdown is
- requested (and after all services have stopped), and to provide some basic support
- for system recovery in case the \fBboot\fR service (or other specified service)
- cannot be started.
- .TP
- \fB\-u\fR, \fB\-\-user\fR
- Run as a user service manager.
- This is the opposite of \fB\-\-system\fR, and is the default if not invoked as the root user.
- .TP
- \fB\-o\fR, \fB\-\-container\fR
- Run in "container mode", i.e. do not perform system management functions (such
- as shutdown/reboot).
- The \fBdinit\fR daemon will simply exit rather than executing the \fB$$$SHUTDOWN_PREFIX@@@shutdown\fR program.
- .TP
- \fB\-q\fR, \fB\-\-quiet\fR
- Run with no output to the terminal/console.
- This disables service status messages and sets the log level for the console log to \fBnone\fR.
- To re-enable (some) output, use the \fB\-\-console\-level\fR option after this option.
- .TP
- \fB\-b\fR \fIpath\fR, \fB\-\-cgroup\-path\fR \fIpath\fR
- Specify the path to resolve relative cgroup paths against.
- If service description settings contain relative cgroup paths, they will be resolved relative to
- this path.
- This option is only available if \fBdinit\fR is built with cgroups support.
- .TP
- \fB\-\-help\fR
- Display brief help text and then exit.
- .TP
- \fB\-\-version\fR
- Display version number and then exit.
- .TP
- [\fB\-t\fR] \fIservice-name\fR, [\fB\-\-service\fR] \fIservice-name\fR
- Specifies the name of a service that should be started (along with its
- dependencies).
- If none are specified, defaults to \fIboot\fR (which requires that a suitable service description
- for the \fIboot\fR service exists). Multiple services can be specified in which case they will each
- be started.
- .sp
- \fBNote:\fR on Linux, if \fBdinit\fR is running as PID 1 and with UID 0, it may ignore "naked"
- service names (without preceding \fB\-\-service\fR/\fB\-t\fR) provided on the command line.
- See the \fBCOMMAND LINE FROM KERNEL\fR section.
- .TP
- \fB\-\-console\-level\fR \fIlevel\fR
- Specify the minimum log level of messages that should be logged to the console.
- From highest to lowest, the levels are \fBerror\fR, \fBwarn\fR, \fBinfo\fR and \fBdebug\fR.
- Use a level of \fBnone\fR to suppress all messages.
- Note that unless \fB\-\-quiet\fR (\fB\-q\fR) is also specified, service state change messages
- (service started, stopped etc) are always output.
- .TP
- \fB\-\-log\-level\fR \fIlevel\fR
- Specify the minimum log level of messages that should be sent to the primary log (syslog facility
- or file).
- From highest to lowest, the levels are \fBerror\fR, \fBwarn\fR, \fBinfo\fR and \fBdebug\fR.
- Use a level of \fBnone\fR to suppress all messages.
- .\"
- .SH SERVICE DESCRIPTION FILES
- .\"
- Service description files specify the parameters of each service.
- They are named for the service they describe, and are found in one of several directories
- (including \fI/etc/dinit.d\fR) for a system instance or \fI$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dinit.d\fR and
- \fI$HOME/.config/dinit.d\fR for a user instance (see also \fB\-\-services\-dir\fR option).
- .LP
- Service description files are read by Dinit on an "as needed" basis.
- Once loaded, a service description is never automatically unloaded (even if the service
- stops or fails).
- A service description can however be unloaded (if the service is stopped) or reloaded
- (with some limitations) via \fBdinitctl\fR(8) using the \fBunload\fR and \fBreload\fR subcommands
- respectively.
- .LP
- See \fBdinit-service\fR(5) for details of the format and available parameters.
- .\"
- .SH SPECIAL SERVICE NAMES
- .\"
- There are two service names that are "special" to Dinit.
- .LP
- The \fIboot\fR service is the service that Dinit starts by default, if no
- other service names are provided when it is started.
- .LP
- The \fIrecovery\fR service is a service that Dinit will offer to start if
- boot appears to fail (that is, if all services stop without a shutdown command
- having been issued), when Dinit is running as system manager.
- .\"
- .SH OPERATION
- .\"
- On starting, Dinit starts the initial service(s) as specified on the command line.
- Starting a service also causes the dependencies of that service to start, and any service
- processes will not be launched until the dependencies are satisfied.
- Similarly, stopping a service first stops any dependent services.
- .LP
- During execution, Dinit accepts commands via a control socket which is created
- by Dinit when it starts.
- This can be used to order that a service be started or stopped, to determine service status, or to
- make certain configuration changes.
- See \fBdinitctl\fR(8) for details.
- Dinit attempts to check for the existence of an already-active socket first, and will refuse to
- start if one exists.
- Unfortunately, this check cannot be done atomically, and should not be relied upon generally as a
- means to avoid starting two instances of dinit.
- .LP
- Process-based services are monitored and, if the process terminates, the service may be stopped or
- the process may be re-started, according to the configuration in the service description.
- .LP
- Once all services stop, the \fBdinit\fR daemon will itself terminate (or, if
- running as system manager, will perform the appropriate type of system shutdown).
- .\"
- .SS SERVICE ACTIVATION MODEL
- .\"
- Dinit maintains a set of running services, some of which have been explicitly activated and some of
- which are active only because they are a dependency of another active service.
- Initially, only the \fBboot\fR service (or another service or services as specified via the command line)
- will be explicitly activated.
- There are both "hard" dependencies between services, and (various types of) "soft" dependencies;
- see \fBdinit-service\fR(5) for details.
- .LP
- For a service to start, all its hard dependencies must first start successfully; if any of them fail,
- the dependent will not be started.
- .LP
- In the case of services which are associated with an external process, the process will not be started
- until all hard dependencies have already started; in the case of a service which fails to start due
- to a dependency failing, the service command will never be run.
- .LP
- If a process associated with a running service terminates, the service will stop automatically
- (this can be affected by service settings, and the service may also restart automatically).
- If the service will not be automatically restarted, any explicit activation will be removed.
- When stopping a service with an associated running process, the process will not be signalled for
- termination (or have its termination command executed) until all dependent services have been stopped.
- .LP
- If a service stops, and is a hard dependency of another service, the other service must also stop
- (and will be stopped automatically, though may restart automatically if configured to do so, which
- may in turn also cause the dependency to restart).
- .LP
- Services can be explicitly activated using the \fBdinitctl\fR(8) subcommand, \fBstart\fR (activating
- a service will also cause it to start, if it is not already started).
- Explicit activation can be removed using the \fBrelease\fR subcommand (which will stop the service only if
- it is not also a dependency of another active service). Note that the \fBstop\fR subcommand also removes
- explicit activation, but can fail with no effect if the service will not be stopped (due to being a
- dependency of another active service).
- .LP
- If a running service is not explicitly activated and has no running dependents, it will be stopped.
- As a consequence, a service stopping may result in some or all of its dependencies also stopping.
- A general rule is that starting a service by explicitly activating it will also start any of its
- dependencies which are not currently started, and that then stopping the same service will result
- in the same set of dependencies also stopping; there are exceptions to this, however - in particular,
- a stopped service which is a soft dependency of an otherwise unrelated active service may be
- started as a result of the starting of a third service, of which it is also a dependency, and in
- this case the third service stopping again will not cause the first to stop, since the second
- service remains an active dependent (it is not likely that this particular quirk of behaviour
- will ever be problematic or even noticed, but it is described here for completeness).
- .\"
- .SS CHARACTER SET HANDLING
- .\"
- Dinit does no character set translation.
- Dinit's own output is in the execution character set as determined at compilation, as is the interpretation of input.
- Service names (and other user-defined inputs) are interpreted as byte sequences and are output as they were read.
- In general, modern systems use the UTF-8 character set universally and no problems will arise;
- however, systems configured to use other character sets may see odd behaviour if the input
- character set does not match the output character set, or if either input or output character sets
- are not a superset of the execution character set.
- .\"
- .SS RUNNING AS SYSTEM MANAGER / PRIMARY INIT
- .\"
- Running as the system manager (primary \fBinit\fR) is currently supported only on
- Linux.
- When run as process ID 1, the \fBdinit\fR daemon by default assumes responsibility for
- system shutdown and restart (partially relying on external utilities which are
- part of the Dinit distribution).
- .LP
- When not running as a system manager, \fBdinit\fR assumes responsibility only for
- service management.
- System shutdown or restart need to be handled by the primary \fBinit\fR, which should start
- \fBdinit\fR on normal startup, and terminate \fBdinit\fR before shutdown, by signalling it and
- waiting for it to terminate after stopping services (possibly by invoking \fBdinitctl shutdown\fR).
- .\"
- .SH LOGGING
- Dinit "logs" via two mechanisms simultaneously: the "console" (standard output, not necessarily associated
- with an actual console if \fBdinit\fR was started with output directed elsewhere) and the "main log facility"
- which is the syslog facility by default but which may be directed to a file.
- .LP
- Various options are available to control the types and "levels" of message that will be sent to each facility,
- and the destination of the main facility.
- The levels available (from low to high) are \fBdebug\fR, \fBnotice\fR, \fBwarn\fR, and \fBerror\fR.
- Selecting a particular log level for facility will cause the facility to receive messages of that level and higher.
- The special level \fBnone\fR inhibits a facility from receiving any messages.
- .LP
- Service status messages (service started or stopped) have a nominal level of \fBnotice\fR, except for failure
- which has a level of \fBerror\fR or \fBwarn\fR in case of transitive failure (due to a dependency).
- These messages are, by default, always issued to the console regardless of level, unless the \fB\-\-quiet\fR
- (\fB\-q\fR) option has been used.
- .LP
- To debug boot issues it may be useful to use \fB\-q\fR (which also sets the level to \fBnone\fR) and then
- also reset the level via the \fB\-\-console\-level\fR option to either \fBwarn\fR or \fBerror\fR.
- This will reduce noise in the output from successful service startup.
- .\"
- .SH COMMAND LINE FROM KERNEL
- .LP
- When running as PID 1, \fBdinit\fR may process the command line differently, to compensate for kernel behaviour.
- .LP
- On Linux, kernel command line options that are not recognised by the kernel will be passed on to \fBdinit\fR.
- However, bugs in some kernel versions may cause some options that are recognised to also be passed to \fBdinit\fR.
- Also, boot managers may insert command-line options such as "\fBauto\fR" (which indicates an "unattended" boot).
- Therefore, \fBdinit\fR ignores all "word like" options other than "\fBsingle\fR", which it treats as
- the name of the service to start (thus allowing "single user mode", assuming that a suitable service description exists).
- Options beginning with "\fB--\fR" will not be recognised by the kernel and will be passed to (and processed by) \fBdinit\fR;
- for example \fB\-\-quiet\fR can be used to suppress console output. Options containing "=" that are unrecognised by the
- kernel (or some that are, due to bugs) are passed to init via the environment rather than via the command line.
- .LP
- There are several ways to work around this.
- Service names following the \fB\-\-container\fR (\fB\-o\fR) or \fB\-\-system\-mgr\fR (\fB\-m\fR) options are not ignored.
- Also, the \fB\-\-service\fR (\fB\-t\fR) option can be used to force a service name to be recognised regardless of operating mode.
- .\"
- .SH FILES
- .\"
- .TP
- \fI/etc/dinit/environment\fR
- Default location of the environment file for Dinit when run as a system
- instance (for user instances there is no default).
- Values are specified as \fINAME\fR=\fIVALUE\fR, one per line, and add to and replace variables present
- in the environment when Dinit started (the "original environment").
- Lines beginning with a hash character (#) are ignored.
- .IP
- The following special commands can be used (each on a single line):
- .RS
- .TP
- \fB!clear\fR
- Clears the environment completely (prevents inheritance of any variables from the original environment).
- .TP
- \fB!unset\fR \fIvar-name\fR...
- Unsets the specified variables.
- Any previously specified value for these variables is forgotten, and they will not inherit any
- value from the original environment.
- .TP
- \fB!import\fR \fIvar-name\fR...
- Imports the value of the named variables from the original environment, overriding the effect of any
- value set previously as well as the effect of previous \fB!unset\fR and \fB!clear\fR commands.
- .RE
- .TP
- \fI/etc/dinit.d\fR, \fI/run/dinit.d\fR, \fI/usr/local/lib/dinit.d\fR, \fI/lib/dinit.d\fR
- Default locations for service description files. The directories are searched in the order listed.
- .TP
- \fI$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dinit.d\fR, \fI$HOME/.config/dinit.d\fR, \fI/etc/dinit.d/user\fR, \fI/usr/lib/dinit.d/user\fR, \fI/usr/local/lib/dinit.d/user\fR
- Default location for service description files for user instances. The directories are searched in the order listed.
- .\"
- .SH SIGNALS
- .LP
- When run as a system manager, SIGINT stops all services and performs a reboot (on Linux, this signal can be
- generated using the control-alt-delete key combination); SIGTERM stops services and halts the system; and
- SIGQUIT performs an immediate shutdown with no service rollback.
- .LP
- When run as a user process or system service manager only, SIGINT and SIGTERM both stop services
- and exit Dinit; SIGQUIT exits Dinit immediately.
- .\"
- .SH SEE ALSO
- .\"
- \fBdinitctl\fR(8), \fBdinit-service\fR(5), \fBdinitcheck\fR(8), \fB$$$SHUTDOWN_PREFIX@@@shutdown(8)\fR.
- .\"
- .SH AUTHOR
- Dinit, and this manual, were written by Davin McCall.
- $$$dnl
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