Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder wrote: > On Thursday 15 July 2004 15.15, Martin Dickopp wrote: > > Sebastian Henschel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > [/etc/default] > > See Policy 9.3.2. (Disclaimer: IANADD.) > > Which does only say: > | To ensure that vital configurable values are always available, the > | init.d script should set default values for each of the shell > | variables it uses, either before sourcing the /etc/default/ file or > | afterwards using something like the : ${VAR:=default} syntax. > which isn't much.
A few bits that you missed: Often there are some variables in the `init.d' scripts whose values control the behaviour of the scripts, and which a system administrator is likely to want to change. As the scripts themselves are frequently `conffile's, modifying them requires that the administrator merge in their changes each time the package is upgraded and the `conffile' changes. To ease the burden on the system administrator, such configurable values should not be placed directly in the script. Instead, they should be placed in a file in `/etc/default', which typically will have the same base name as the `init.d' script. This extra file should be sourced by the script when the script runs. It must contain only variable settings and comments in POSIX `sh' format. It may either be a `conffile' or a configuration file maintained by the package maintainer scripts. See Section 10.7, `Configuration files' for more details. 9.3.5. Example -------------- The `bind' DNS (nameserver) package wants to make sure that the nameserver is running in multiuser runlevels, and is properly shut down with the system. It puts a script in `/etc/init.d', naming the script appropriately `bind'. As you can see, the script interprets the argument `reload' to send the nameserver a `HUP' signal (causing it to reload its configuration); this way the system administrator can say `/etc/init.d/bind reload' to reload the name server. The script has one configurable value, which can be used to pass parameters to the named program at startup; this value is read from `/etc/default/bind' (see below). ... Complementing the above init script is a configuration file `/etc/default/bind', which contains configurable parameters used by the script. This would be created by the `postinst' script if it was not already present, and removed on purge by the `postrm' script. # Specified parameters to pass to named. See named(8). # You may uncomment the following line, and edit to taste. #PARAMS="-u nobody" It's really not that hard to run less on policy and type /etc\/default -- see shy jo
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature