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RC(8)			    System Manager's Manual			 RC(8)

NAME
       rc -- command scripts for auto-reboot and daemon	startup

SYNOPSIS
       rc
       rc.conf
       rc.conf.local
       rc.d/
       rc.firewall
       rc.local
       rc.resume
       rc.shutdown
       rc.subr

DESCRIPTION
       The  rc utility is the command script which controls the	automatic boot
       process after being called by init(8).  The  rc.local  script  contains
       commands	 which	are pertinent only to a	specific site.	Typically, the
       /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ mechanism is used instead of rc.local  these  days
       but  if you want	to use rc.local, it is still supported.	 In this case,
       it should source	/etc/rc.conf and  contain  additional  custom  startup
       code  for your system.  The best	way to handle rc.local,	however, is to
       separate	 it  out  into	rc.d/  style  scripts  and  place  them	 under
       /usr/local/etc/rc.d/.  The rc.conf file contains	the global system con-
       figuration   information	 referenced  by	 the  startup  scripts,	 while
       rc.conf.local contains the local	system configuration.  See  rc.conf(5)
       for more	information.

       The  rc.d/ directories contain scripts which will be automatically exe-
       cuted at	boot time and shutdown time.

       The service(8) command provides a convenient interface to  manage  rc.d
       services.

       The  sysrc(8)  command  provides	a scripting interface to modify	system
       config files.

   Operation of	rc
       1.   If autobooting, set	autoboot=yes and enable	a flag	(rc_fast=yes),
	    which prevents the rc.d/ scripts from performing the check for al-
	    ready running processes (thus speeding up the boot process).  This
	    rc_fast=yes	speedup	will not occur when rc is started up after ex-
	    iting the single-user shell.

       2.   Determine  whether	the  system is booting diskless, and if	so run
	    the	/etc/rc.initdiskless script.

       3.   Source /etc/rc.subr	to load	various	rc.subr(8) shell functions  to
	    use.

       4.   Load the configuration files (see below for	reloading).

       5.   Determine  if  booting  in	a jail,	and add	"nojail" (no jails al-
	    lowed) or "nojailvnet" (only allow vnet-enabled jails) to the list
	    of KEYWORDS	to skip	in rcorder(8).

       6.   If the file	${firstboot_sentinel} does not exist, add  "firstboot"
	    to the list	of KEYWORDS to skip in rcorder(8).

       7.   Invoke  rcorder(8)	to  order  the files in	/etc/rc.d/ that	do not
	    have a "nostart" KEYWORD (refer to rcorder(8)'s -s flag).

       8.   Call each script in	turn using run_rc_script() (from  rc.subr(8)),
	    which  sets	 $1  to	"start", and sources the script	in a subshell.
	    Stop  processing  when  the	 script	 that  is  the	value  of  the
	    $early_late_divider	has been run.

       9.   Check  again  to  see if the file ${firstboot_sentinel} exists (in
	    case it is located on a newly mounted file system) and adjust  the
	    list of KEYWORDs to	skip appropriately.

       10.  Re-run   rcorder(8),  this	time  including	 the  scripts  in  the
	    $local_startup  directories.   Ignore   everything	 up   to   the
	    $early_late_divider, then start executing the scripts as described
	    above.

       11.  If	the file ${firstboot_sentinel} exists, delete it.  If the file
	    ${firstboot_sentinel}-reboot also exists (because it  was  created
	    by a script), then delete it and reboot.

   Operation of	rc.shutdown
       1.   Set	 rc_shutdown  to  the  value  of  the first argument passed to
	    rc.shutdown	or to "unspecified" if no argument was passed.

       2.   Source /etc/rc.subr	to load	various	rc.subr(8) shell functions  to
	    use.

       3.   Load the configuration files.

       4.   Invoke  rcorder(8)	to  order  the	files  in  /etc/rc.d/  and the
	    $local_startup directories that have a "shutdown"  KEYWORD	(refer
	    to	rcorder(8)'s  -k flag),	reverse	that order, and	assign the re-
	    sult to a variable.

       5.   Call each script in	turn using run_rc_script() (from  rc.subr(8)),
	    which sets $1 to "faststop", and sources the script	in a subshell.

   Contents of rc.d/
       rc.d/  is located in /etc/rc.d/.	 The following file naming conventions
       are currently used in rc.d/:

	     ALLUPPERCASE  Scripts that	are "placeholders" to ensure that cer-
			   tain	operations are performed  before  others.   In
			   order of startup, these are:

			   FILESYSTEMS	Ensure	that  root  and	other critical
					file systems are mounted.  This	is the
					default	$early_late_divider.

			   NETWORKING	Ensure basic network services are run-
					ning, including	general	 network  con-
					figuration.

			   SERVERS	Ensure	basic  services	exist for ser-
					vices  that  start  early   (such   as
					nisdomain),  because they are required
					by DAEMON below.

			   DAEMON	Check-point before all general purpose
					daemons	such as	lpd and	ntpd.

			   LOGIN	Check-point before user	login services
					(inetd and sshd), as well as  services
					which  might  run  commands  as	 users
					(cron and sendmail).

	     bar	   Scripts that	are sourced in a subshell.   The  boot
			   does	 not  stop  if such a script terminates	with a
			   non-zero status, but	a script can stop the boot  if
			   necessary  by  invoking  the	 stop_boot()  function
			   (from rc.subr(8)).

       Each script should contain rcorder(8) keywords, especially an appropri-
       ate "PROVIDE" entry, and	if necessary "REQUIRE" and "BEFORE" keywords.

       Each script is expected to support at least  the	 following  arguments,
       which are automatically supported if it uses the	run_rc_command() func-
       tion:

	     start    Start  the  service.  This should	check that the service
		      is to be	started	 as  specified	by  rc.conf(5).	  Also
		      checks  if the service is	already	running	and refuses to
		      start if it is.  This latter check is not	 performed  by
		      standard	FreeBSD	 scripts if the	system is starting di-
		      rectly to	multi-user mode, to speed up the boot process.
		      If forcestart is given, ignore the rc.conf(5) check  and
		      start anyway.

	     stop     If  the  service	is  to	be  started  as	 specified  by
		      rc.conf(5), stop the service.  This  should  check  that
		      the  service  is	running	and complain if	it is not.  If
		      forcestop	is given, ignore the rc.conf(5)	check and  at-
		      tempt to stop.

	     restart  Perform a	stop then a start.

	     status   If the script starts a process (rather than performing a
		      one-off  operation),  show  the  status  of the process.
		      Otherwise	it is not necessary to support this  argument.
		      Defaults to displaying the process ID of the program (if
		      running).

	     enable   Enable the service in rc.conf(5).

	     disable  Disable the service in rc.conf(5).

	     delete   Remove	 the	 service    from    rc.conf(5).	    If
		      `service_delete_empty'	 is	set	to	"YES",
		      /etc/rc.conf.d/$servicename will be deleted if empty af-
		      ter modification.

	     describe
		      Print a short description	of what	the script does.

	     extracommands
		      Print the	script's non-standard commands.

	     poll     If the script starts a process (rather than performing a
		      one-off  operation), wait	for the	command	to exit.  Oth-
		      erwise it	is not necessary to support this argument.

	     enabled  Return 0 if the service is enabled and 1 if it  is  not.
		      This command does	not print anything.

	     rcvar    Display  which  rc.conf(5) variables are used to control
		      the startup of the service (if any).

       If a script must	implement additional commands it can list them in  the
       extra_commands  variable,  and  define their actions in a variable con-
       structed	from the command name (see the "EXAMPLES" section).

       The configuration files are normally read only once at the start	 of  a
       boot  sequence; if a script needs to enable or disable any other	script
       that would run later in the sequence, it	must send a SIGALRM to the  rc
       process (identified by $RC_PID) to have it re-read the files.

       The    following	  key	points	 apply	 to   old-style	  scripts   in
       /usr/local/etc/rc.d/:

          Scripts are only executed if	their basename(1)  matches  the	 shell
	   globbing pattern *.sh, and they are executable.  Any	other files or
	   directories present within the directory are	silently ignored.

          When	 a  script  is	executed at boot time, it is passed the	string
	   "start" as its first	and only argument.  At shutdown	 time,	it  is
	   passed the string "stop" as its first and only argument.  All rc.d/
	   scripts  are	 expected to handle these arguments appropriately.  If
	   no action needs to be taken at a given time (either	boot  time  or
	   shutdown  time),  the  script  should exit successfully and without
	   producing an	error message.

          The scripts within each directory are executed  in  lexicographical
	   order.   If	a specific order is required, numbers may be used as a
	   prefix to the existing filenames, so	for example 100.foo  would  be
	   executed  before 200.bar; without the numeric prefixes the opposite
	   would be true.

          The output from each	script is  traditionally  a  space  character,
	   followed  by	the name of the	software package being started or shut
	   down, without a trailing newline character.

SCRIPTS	OF INTEREST
       When an automatic reboot	is in progress,	rc is invoked with  the	 argu-
       ment   autoboot.	   One	 of   the   scripts  run  from	/etc/rc.d/  is
       /etc/rc.d/fsck.	This script runs fsck(8) with  option  -p  and	-F  to
       "preen"	all the	disks of minor inconsistencies resulting from the last
       system shutdown.	 If this fails,	then checks/repairs of serious	incon-
       sistencies  caused by hardware or software failure will be performed in
       the background at the end of the	booting	process.  If autoboot  is  not
       set,  when  going  from single-user to multi-user mode for example, the
       script does not do anything.

       The /etc/rc.d/local script can execute scripts from multiple rc.d/  di-
       rectories.   The	 default  location  includes /usr/local/etc/rc.d/, but
       these may be overridden with the	local_startup rc.conf(5) variable.

       The /etc/rc.d/serial script is used to set any  special	configurations
       for serial devices.

       The  rc.firewall	script is used to configure rules for the kernel based
       firewall	service.  It has several possible options:

	     open      will allow anyone in
	     client    will try	to protect just	this machine
	     simple    will try	to protect a whole network
	     closed    totally disables	IP services except via lo0 interface
	     UNKNOWN   disables	the loading of firewall	rules
	     filename  will load the rules in the given	 filename  (full  path
		       required).

       Most  daemons, including	network	related	daemons, have their own	script
       in /etc/rc.d/, which can	be used	to start, stop,	and check  the	status
       of the service.

       Any  architecture  specific scripts, such as /etc/rc.d/apm for example,
       specifically check that they are	on that	architecture  before  starting
       the daemon.

       Following tradition, all	startup	files reside in	/etc.

FILES
       /etc/rc
       /etc/rc.conf
       /etc/rc.conf.local
       /etc/rc.d/
       /etc/rc.firewall
       /etc/rc.local
       /etc/rc.shutdown
       /etc/rc.subr
       /var/run/dmesg.boot		 dmesg(8)  results  soon  after	the rc
					 process begins.  Useful when dmesg(8)
					 buffer	in the kernel  no  longer  has
					 this information.

EXAMPLES
       The  following  is  a minimal rc.d/ style script.  Most scripts require
       little more than	the following.

	     #!/bin/sh
	     #

	     # PROVIDE:	foo
	     # REQUIRE:	bar_service_required_to_precede_foo

	     . /etc/rc.subr

	     name="foo"
	     rcvar=foo_enable
	     command="/usr/local/bin/foo"

	     load_rc_config $name
	     run_rc_command "$1"

       Certain scripts may want	to provide enhanced functionality.   The  user
       may  access this	functionality through additional commands.  The	script
       may list	and define as many commands at it needs.

	     #!/bin/sh
	     #

	     # PROVIDE:	foo
	     # REQUIRE:	bar_service_required_to_precede_foo
	     # BEFORE:	baz_service_requiring_foo_to_precede_it

	     . /etc/rc.subr

	     name="foo"
	     rcvar=foo_enable
	     command="/usr/local/bin/foo"
	     extra_commands="nop hello"
	     hello_cmd="echo Hello World."
	     nop_cmd="do_nop"

	     do_nop()
	     {
		     echo "I do	nothing."
	     }

	     load_rc_config $name
	     run_rc_command "$1"

       As all processes	are  killed  by	 init(8)  at  shutdown,	 the  explicit
       kill(1) is unnecessary, but is often included.

SEE ALSO
       kill(1),	 rc.conf(5),  init(8),	rc.resume(8),  rc.subr(8), rcorder(8),
       reboot(8), savecore(8), service(8), sysrc(8)

       Practical	  rc.d		 scripting	     in		  BSD,
       https://docs.freebsd.org/en/articles/rc-scripting/.

HISTORY
       The rc utility appeared in 4.0BSD.

FreeBSD	13.2			 June 1, 2023				 RC(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | SCRIPTS OF INTEREST | FILES | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY

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