acpid man page on CentOS

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acpid(8)							      acpid(8)

NAME
       acpid - Advanced Configuration and Power Interface event daemon

SYNOPSIS
       acpid [options]

DESCRIPTION
       acpid  is designed to notify user-space programs of ACPI events.	 acpid
       should be started during the system boot, and will run as a  background
       process,	 by default.  It will open an events file (/proc/acpi/event by
       default) and attempt to read whole lines.  When a line is received  (an
       event),	acpid will examine a list of rules, and execute the rules that
       match the event.

       Rules are defined by simple configuration files.	 acpid will look in  a
       configuration  directory	 (/etc/acpi/events  by default), and parse all
       files that do not begin with a period ('.').  Each file must define two
       things:	an  event  and an action.  Any blank lines, or lines where the
       first character is a pound sign ('#') are  ignored.   Extraneous	 lines
       are  flagged  as	 warnings,  but	 are  not  fatal.  Each line has three
       tokens: the key, a literal equal sign, and the value.  The key  can  be
       up  to 63 characters, and is case-insensitive (but whitespace matters).
       The value can be up to 511 characters, and is case and whitespace  sen‐
       sitive.

       The event value is a regular expression (see regcomp(3)), against which
       events are matched.

       The action value is a commandline, which will be	 invoked  via  /bin/sh
       whenever	 an  event matching the rule in question occurs.  The command‐
       line may include shell-special characters, and they will be  preserved.
       The  only  special  characters in an action value are "%" escaped.  The
       string "%e" will be replaced by the literal text of the event for which
       the action was invoked.	This string may contain spaces, so the comman‐
       dline must take care to quote the "%e" if it wants a single token.  The
       string  "%%"  will be replaced by a literal "%".	 All other "%" escapes
       are reserved, and will cause a rule to not load.

       This feature allows multiple rules to be defined	 for  the  same	 event
       (though	no  ordering is guaranteed), as well as one rule to be defined
       for multiple events.  To force acpid to reload the rule	configuration,
       send it a SIGHUP.

       In  addition  to	 rule  files, acpid also accepts connections on a UNIX
       domain socket (/var/run/acpid.socket by default).  Any application  may
       connect	to  this  socket.  Once connected, acpid will send the text of
       all ACPI events to the client.  The client has  the  responsibility  of
       filtering  for messages about which it cares.  acpid will not close the
       client socket except in the case of a SIGHUP or acpid exiting.

       acpid will log all of it's activities, as well as the stdout and stderr
       of any actions to a log file (/var/log/acpid by default).

       All  the	 default  file and directories can be changed with commandline
       options.

OPTIONS
       -c, --confdir directory
		   This option changes the directory in which acpid looks  for
		   rule configuration files.  Default is /etc/acpi/events.

       -C, --clientmax number
		   This	 option	 changes the maximum number of non-root socket
		   connections which can be made to the acpid socket.  Default
		   is 256.

       -d, --debug This option increases the acpid debug level by one.	If the
		   debug level is non-zero, acpid will run in the  foreground,
		   and will log to stdout/stderr, rather than a log file.

       -e, --eventfile filename
		   This	 option	 changes the event file from which acpid reads
		   events.  Default is /proc/acpi/event.

       -g, --socketgroup groupname
		   This option changes the group ownership of the UNIX	domain
		   socket to which acpid publishes events.

       -l, --logfile filename
		   This	 option	 changes  the  log file to which acpid writes.
		   Default is /var/log/acpid.

       -m, --socketmode mode
		   This option changes the  permissions	 of  the  UNIX	domain
		   socket to which acpid publishes events.  Default is 0666.

       -s, --socketfile filename
		   This	 option	 changes  the  name  of the UNIX domain socket
		   which acpid opens.  Default is /var/run/acpid.socket.

       -S, --nosocket filename
		   This option tells acpid not to open a UNIX  domain  socket.
		   This	 overrides the -s option, and negates all other socket
		   options.

       -v, --version
		   Print version information and exit.

       -h, --help  Show help and exit.

EXAMPLE
       This example - placed in /etc/acpi/events/power - will shut  down  your
       system if you press the power button.

       event=button/power.*
       action=/usr/local/sbin/power.sh "%e"

       The  script power.sh gets called and will see the complete event string
       as parameter $1.

DEPENDENCIES
       Please make sure you are using the latest ACPI code possible.  This  is
       available from
	   http://developer.intel.com/technology/iapc/acpi/downloads.htm.

FILES
       /proc/acpi/event
       /etc/acpi/
       /var/log/acpid
       /var/run/acpid.socket

BUGS
       There are no known bugs.	 To file bug reports, see AUTHORS below.

SEE ALSO
       regcomp(3), sh(1), socket(2), connect(2)

AUTHORS
       Tim Hockin <thockin@sun.com>

				  August 2001			      acpid(8)
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