chkconfig man page on Mandriva

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   17060 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
Mandriva logo
[printable version]

CHKCONFIG(8)							  CHKCONFIG(8)

NAME
       chkconfig  -  updates  and queries runlevel information for system ser‐
       vices

SYNOPSIS
       chkconfig [--list] [name]
       chkconfig --add name
       chkconfig --del name
       chkconfig --override name
       chkconfig [--level levels] name <on|off|reset|resetpriorities>
       chkconfig [--level levels] name

DESCRIPTION
       chkconfig provides a  simple  command-line  tool	 for  maintaining  the
       /etc/rc[0-6].d  directory  hierarchy by relieving system administrators
       of the task of directly manipulating the	 numerous  symbolic  links  in
       those directories.

       This  implementation of chkconfig was inspired by the chkconfig command
       present in the IRIX operating system. Rather than maintaining  configu‐
       ration  information  outside  of the /etc/rc[0-6].d hierarchy, however,
       this version directly manages  the  symlinks  in	 /etc/rc[0-6].d.  This
       leaves  all  of	the  configuration information regarding what services
       init starts in a single location.

       chkconfig has five distinct functions: adding new services for  manage‐
       ment,  removing	services  from management, listing the current startup
       information for services, changing the  startup	information  for  ser‐
       vices, and checking the startup state of a particular service.

       When chkconfig is run with only a service name, it checks to see if the
       service is configured to be started in the current runlevel. If it  is,
       chkconfig  returns true; otherwise it returns false. The --level option
       may be used to have chkconfig query an alternative runlevel rather than
       the current one.

       When chkconfig is run with the --list argument, or no arguments at all,
       a listing is displayed of all services and their current configuration.

       If one of on, off, reset, or resetpriorities  is	 specified  after  the
       service	name, chkconfig changes the startup information for the speci‐
       fied service.  The on and off flags cause the service to be started  or
       stopped,	 respectively,	in the runlevels being changed. The reset flag
       resets the on/off state for all runlevels for the service  to  whatever
       is  specified in the init script in question, while the resetpriorities
       flag resets the start/stop priorities for the service  to  whatever  is
       specifed in the init script.

       By  default,  the on and off options affect only runlevels 2, 3, 4, and
       5, while reset and resetpriorities affects all of the  runlevels.   The
       --level option may be used to specify which runlevels are affected.

       Note that for every service, each runlevel has either a start script or
       a stop script.  When switching runlevels, init  will  not  re-start  an
       already-started	service,  and  will  not re-stop a service that is not
       running.

       chkconfig also can manage xinetd scripts via the means of xinetd.d con‐
       figuration  files.  Note that only the on, off, and --list commands are
       supported for xinetd.d services.

OPTIONS
       --level levels
	      Specifies the run levels an operation should pertain to.	It  is
	      given  as	 a string of numbers from 0 to 7. For example, --level
	      35 specifies runlevels 3 and 5.

       --add name

	      This option adds a new  service  for  management	by  chkconfig.
	      When  a new service is added, chkconfig ensures that the service
	      has either a start or a kill entry in  every  runlevel.  If  any
	      runlevel	is missing such an entry, chkconfig creates the appro‐
	      priate entry as specified by the	default	 values	 in  the  init
	      script.  Note  that default entries in LSB-delimited 'INIT INFO'
	      sections take precedence	over  the  default  runlevels  in  the
	      initscript;  if  any Required-Start or Required-Stop entries are
	      present, the start and stop priorities of	 the  script  will  be
	      adjusted to account for these dependencies.

       --del name
	      The  service  is removed from chkconfig management, and any sym‐
	      bolic links in /etc/rc[0-6].d which pertain to it are removed.

	      Note that future package installs for this service may run  chk‐
	      config  --add,  which  will re-add such links. To disable a ser‐
	      vice, run chkconfig name off.

       --override name
	      If service name is configured exactly as	it  would  be  if  the
	      --add  option  had  been	specified  with	 no  override  file in
	      /etc/chkconfig.d/name, and if /etc/chkconfig.d/name  now	exists
	      and  is  specified  differently from the base initscript, change
	      the configuration for  service  name  to	follow	the  overrides
	      instead of the base configuration.

       --list name
	      This  option  lists  all	of  the services which chkconfig knows
	      about, and whether they are stopped or started in each runlevel.
	      If  name is specified, information in only display about service
	      name.

RUNLEVEL FILES
       Each service which should be manageable by chkconfig needs two or  more
       commented  lines	 added to its init.d script. The first line tells chk‐
       config what runlevels the service should be started in by  default,  as
       well  as the start and stop priority levels. If the service should not,
       by default, be started in any runlevels, a - should be used in place of
       the  runlevels  list.   The  second line contains a description for the
       service, and may be extended across multiple lines with backslash  con‐
       tinuation.

       For example, random.init has these three lines:
       # chkconfig: 2345 20 80
       # description: Saves and restores system entropy pool for \
       #	      higher quality random number generation.
       This  says  that the random script should be started in levels 2, 3, 4,
       and 5, that its start priority should be 20, and that its stop priority
       should  be  80.	 You should be able to figure out what the description
       says; the \ causes the line to be continued.  The extra space in	 front
       of the line is ignored.

OVERRIDE FILES
       File in /etc/chkconfig.d/servicename are parsed using the same comments
       that chkconfig notices in init service scripts, and override values  in
       the init service scripts themselves.

SEE ALSO
       init(8) ntsysv(8) system-config-services(8)

AUTHOR
       Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>

4th Berkeley Distribution	Wed Oct 8 1997			  CHKCONFIG(8)
[top]

List of man pages available for Mandriva

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net