On 01/08/2019 20:39, Rodney W. Grimes wrote: >> On Aug 1, 2019, at 08:53, Rodney W. Grimes <freebsd-...@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net> >> wrote: >> >>>> >>>> Is it possible in an rc script to distinguish between a manual stop >>>> (e.g., service foo stop) and a stop during a system shutdown (via >>>> rc.shutdown) ? >>>> Are there any marker variables for that? >>>> Or something in the global system state? >>> >>> Not that I can think of, but I like this idea, >>> I am sure that use cases exist. >> >> Have you looked at: >> keyword: shutdown >> etc? > > Well that does indeed seem to wipe out my > "Not that I can think of". So infact an rc script > can tell, it is invoked as: > > /etc/rc.d/foo shutdown > during a system shutdown > > vs > > /etc/rc.d/foo stop > when invoked by service foo stop? > > Is that correct? >
Except there is no 'foo shutdown'. It's foo stop in both cases. To be pedantic, it's foo faststop for shutdown, but that can be manually invoked as well. -- Andriy Gapon _______________________________________________ freebsd-rc@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-rc To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-rc-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"