s6-rc
Software
skarnet.org
The s6-rc-init program
s6-rc-init is an initialization tool for the s6-rc
system. It must be run as root, at boot time, prior to any
invocation of the
s6-rc binary.
Interface
s6-rc-init [ -c compiled ] [ -l live ] [ -t timeout ] scandir
- compiled, live and scandir must be
absolute paths.
- s6-rc-init expects to find a compiled service database
in compiled. It expects to be able to create a directory
at live. It also expects that an instance of
s6-svscan
is running on scandir.
- s6-rc-init initializes the live state in live. It
declares compiled as the current service database and
sets the state as "all services down".
- It then copies verbatim all
the service directories declared by compiled into a
subdirectory of live, adds down files to the live copies
and links them into scandir. It then triggers
s6-svscan,
which will pick up the new service directories and start
http://skarnet.org/software/s6/s6-supervise.html">s6-supervise
processes on them - but the service themselves will not be started
right away, because of the down files.
- s6-rc-init waits for all s6-supervise processes to be
operational, then exits 0.
Options
- -t timeout : if all
s6-supervise processes are not up and running after timeout
milliseconds, s6-rc-init will complain and exit 111. This is a
safety feature so s6-rc-init doesn't hang indefinitely on a
nonworking installation; normally this initialization should not take
more than a few milliseconds.
- -c compiled : declare compiled
as the current compiled service database for the upcoming live state.
Default is /etc/s6-rc/compiled.
- -l live : Store the live state into
the live directory, which should not exist prior to running
s6-rc-init, but should be under a writable filesystem - likely a RAM
filesystem. Default is
/run/s6-rc.
Typical usage
Administrators should invoke s6-rc-init once, in their
early boot scripts, after s6-svscan is functional and ready to
supervise longrun services (and after its catch-all logger, if
any, has started), but before any
other initialization. (The rest of the initialization can be
written as a set of s6-rc services, and performed by just one
invocation of the s6-rc change command.)
For instance, when using an init created by
s6-linux-init,
s6-rc-init should be the first command in the
stage2 (by default /etc/rc.init) script.