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init(3)			   Erlang Module Definition		       init(3)

NAME
       init - Coordination of system startup.

DESCRIPTION
       This  module  is	 preloaded  and	 contains the code for the init	system
       process that coordinates	the startup of the system. The first  function
       evaluated  at  startup  is  boot(BootArgs), where BootArgs is a list of
       command-line arguments supplied to the Erlang runtime system  from  the
       local operating system; see erl(1).

       init  reads the boot script, which contains instructions	on how to ini-
       tiate  the  system.  For	 more  information  about  boot	 scripts,  see
       script(4).

       init also contains functions to restart,	reboot,	and stop the system.

EXPORTS
       boot(BootArgs) -> no_return()

	      Types:

		 BootArgs = [binary()]

	      Starts  the  Erlang runtime system. This function	is called when
	      the emulator is started and coordinates system startup.

	      BootArgs are all	command-line  arguments	 except	 the  emulator
	      flags, that is, flags and	plain arguments; see erl(1).

	      init  interprets	some  of  the  flags, see section Command-Line
	      Flags below. The remaining flags ("user flags") and plain	 argu-
	      ments  are passed	to the init loop and can be retrieved by call-
	      ing get_arguments/0 and get_plain_arguments/0, respectively.

       get_argument(Flag) -> {ok, Arg} | error

	      Types:

		 Flag =	atom()
		 Arg = [Values :: [string()]]

	      Returns all values associated with the  command-line  user  flag
	      Flag. If Flag is provided	several	times, each Values is returned
	      in preserved order. Example:

	      %	erl -a b c -a d
	      1> init:get_argument(a).
	      {ok,[["b","c"],["d"]]}

	      The following flags are defined automatically  and  can  be  re-
	      trieved using this function:

		root:
		  The installation directory of	Erlang/OTP, $ROOT:

		2> init:get_argument(root).
		{ok,[["/usr/local/otp/releases/otp_beam_solaris8_r10b_patched"]]}

		progname:
		  The name of the program which	started	Erlang:

		3> init:get_argument(progname).
		{ok,[["erl"]]}

		home:
		  The home directory:

		4> init:get_argument(home).
		{ok,[["/home/harry"]]}

	      Returns error if no value	is associated with Flag.

       get_arguments() -> Flags

	      Types:

		 Flags = [{Flag	:: atom(), Values :: [string()]}]

	      Returns all command-line flags and the system-defined flags, see
	      get_argument/1.

       get_plain_arguments() ->	[Arg]

	      Types:

		 Arg = string()

	      Returns any plain	command-line arguments as a  list  of  strings
	      (possibly	empty).

       get_status() -> {InternalStatus,	ProvidedStatus}

	      Types:

		 InternalStatus	= internal_status()
		 ProvidedStatus	= term()
		 internal_status() = starting |	started	| stopping

	      The  current status of the init process can be inspected.	During
	      system startup (initialization), InternalStatus is starting, and
	      ProvidedStatus indicates how far the boot	script has been	inter-
	      preted. Each {progress,  Info}  term  interpreted	 in  the  boot
	      script  affects ProvidedStatus, that is, ProvidedStatus gets the
	      value of Info.

       reboot()	-> ok

	      All applications are taken down smoothly,	all code is  unloaded,
	      and  all	ports are closed before	the system terminates. If com-
	      mand-line	flag -heart was	specified, the heart program tries  to
	      reboot the system. For more information, see heart(3).

	      To  limit	 the  shutdown time, the time init is allowed to spend
	      taking down applications,	command-line flag -shutdown_time is to
	      be used.

       restart() -> ok

	      The  system  is  restarted inside	the running Erlang node, which
	      means that the emulator is not restarted.	All  applications  are
	      taken  down  smoothly,  all  code	is unloaded, and all ports are
	      closed before the	system is booted again in the same way as ini-
	      tially started. The same BootArgs	are used again.

	      To  limit	 the  shutdown time, the time init is allowed to spend
	      taking down applications,	command-line flag -shutdown_time is to
	      be used.

       script_id() -> Id

	      Types:

		 Id = term()

	      Gets the identity	of the boot script used	to boot	the system. Id
	      can be any Erlang	term. In the delivered	boot  scripts,	Id  is
	      {Name, Vsn}. Name	and Vsn	are strings.

       stop() -> ok

	      The same as stop(0).

       stop(Status) -> ok

	      Types:

		 Status	= integer() >= 0 | string()

	      All  applications	are taken down smoothly, all code is unloaded,
	      and all ports are	closed before the system terminates by calling
	      halt(Status).  If	 command-line  flag  -heart was	specified, the
	      heart program is terminated before the Erlang  node  terminates.
	      For more information, see	heart(3).

	      To  limit	 the  shutdown time, the time init is allowed to spend
	      taking down applications,	command-line flag -shutdown_time is to
	      be used.

COMMAND-LINE FLAGS
   Warning:
       The support for loading of code from archive files is experimental. The
       only purpose of releasing it before it is  ready	 is  to	 obtain	 early
       feedback.  The  file  format,  semantics, interfaces, and so on,	can be
       changed in a future release. The	-code_path_choice flag is also experi-
       mental.

       The init	module interprets the following	command-line flags:

	 --:
	   Everything following	-- up to the next flag is considered plain ar-
	   guments and can be retrieved	using get_plain_arguments/0.

	 -code_path_choice Choice:
	   Can be set to strict	or relaxed. It controls	how each directory  in
	   the code path is to be interpreted:

	   * Strictly as it appears in the boot	script,	or

	   * init  is  to be more relaxed and try to find a suitable directory
	     if	it can choose from a regular ebin directory and	an ebin	direc-
	     tory in an	archive	file.

	   This	flag is	particular useful when you want	to elaborate with code
	   loading from	archives without editing the boot script. For more in-
	   formation  about interpretation of boot scripts, see	script(4). The
	   flag	has also a similar effect on how the code  server  works;  see
	   code(3).

	 -epmd_module Module:
	   Specifies  the  module  to  use for registration and	lookup of node
	   names. Defaults to erl_epmd.

	 -eval Expr:
	   Scans, parses, and evaluates	an arbitrary  expression  Expr	during
	   system  initialization.  If	any of these steps fail	(syntax	error,
	   parse error,	or exception during evaluation), Erlang	stops with  an
	   error  message.  In the following example Erlang is used as a hexa-
	   decimal calculator:

	 % erl -noshell	-eval 'R = 16#1F+16#A0,	io:format("~.16B~n", [R])' \\
	 -s erlang halt
	 BF

	   If multiple -eval expressions are specified,	they are evaluated se-
	   quentially  in the order specified. -eval expressions are evaluated
	   sequentially	with -s	and -run function calls	(this also in the  or-
	   der	specified).  As	 with -s and -run, an evaluation that does not
	   terminate blocks the	system initialization process.

	 -extra:
	   Everything following	-extra is considered plain arguments  and  can
	   be retrieved	using get_plain_arguments/0.

	 -run Mod [Func	[Arg1, Arg2, ...]]:
	   Evaluates the specified function call during	system initialization.
	   Func	defaults to start. If no arguments are provided, the  function
	   is assumed to be of arity 0.	Otherwise it is	assumed	to be of arity
	   1, taking the list [Arg1,Arg2,...] as argument. All	arguments  are
	   passed  as strings. If an exception is raised, Erlang stops with an
	   error message.

	   Example:

	 % erl -run foo	-run foo bar -run foo bar baz 1	2

	   This	starts the Erlang runtime system and evaluates	the  following
	   functions:

	 foo:start()
	 foo:bar()
	 foo:bar(["baz", "1", "2"]).

	   The	functions  are	executed  sequentially	in  an	initialization
	   process, which then terminates normally and passes control  to  the
	   user.  This means that a -run call that does	not return blocks fur-
	   ther	processing; to avoid this, use some variant of spawn  in  such
	   cases.

	 -s Mod	[Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]:
	   Evaluates the specified function call during	system initialization.
	   Func	defaults to start. If no arguments are provided, the  function
	   is assumed to be of arity 0.	Otherwise it is	assumed	to be of arity
	   1, taking the list [Arg1,Arg2,...] as argument. All	arguments  are
	   passed  as  atoms.  If an exception is raised, Erlang stops with an
	   error message.

	   Example:

	 % erl -s foo -s foo bar -s foo	bar baz	1 2

	   This	starts the Erlang runtime system and evaluates	the  following
	   functions:

	 foo:start()
	 foo:bar()
	 foo:bar([baz, '1', '2']).

	   The	functions  are	executed  sequentially	in  an	initialization
	   process, which then terminates normally and passes control  to  the
	   user. This means that a -s call that	does not return	blocks further
	   processing; to avoid	this, use some variant of spawn	in such	cases.

	   Because of the limited length of atoms, it is  recommended  to  use
	   -run	instead.

EXAMPLE
       % erl --	a b -children thomas claire -ages 7 3 -- x y

       1> init:get_plain_arguments().
       ["a","b","x","y"]
       2> init:get_argument(children).
       {ok,[["thomas","claire"]]}
       3> init:get_argument(ages).
       {ok, [["7","3"]]}
       4> init:get_argument(silly).
       error

SEE ALSO
       erl_prim_loader(3), heart(3)

Ericsson AB			   erts	10.3			       init(3)

NAME | DESCRIPTION | EXPORTS | COMMAND-LINE FLAGS | EXAMPLE | SEE ALSO

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