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INITTAB
This document was created by man2html using the manual pages.
Section: Linux System Administrator's Manual (5)
Updated: May 19, 1998
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NAME
inittab - format of the inittab file used by the sysv-compatible init process
DESCRIPTION
The
inittab file describes which processes are started at bootup and during normal operation (e.g. /etc/init.d/boot, /etc/init.d/rc, gettys...).
Init(8) distinguishes multiple
runlevels, each of which can have its own set of processes that are started. Valid runlevels are
0-
6 plus
A,
B, and
C for
ondemand entries. An entry in the
inittab file has the following format:
-
id:runlevels:action:process
Lines beginning with `#' are ignored.
-
id
-
is a unique sequence of 1-4 characters which identifies an entry in
inittab(for versions of sysvinit compiled with libraries < 5.2.18 or a.out libraries the limit is 2 characters).
Note: For gettys or other login processes, the id field should be the tty suffix of the corresponding tty, e.g.1 for tty1. Otherwise, the login accounting might not work correctly.
-
runlevels
-
lists the runlevels for which the specified action should be taken.
-
action
-
describes which action should be taken.
-
process
-
specifies the process to be executed. If the process field starts with a `+' character,
init will not do utmp and wtmp accounting for that process. This is needed for gettys that insist on doing their own utmp/wtmp housekeeping. This is also a historic bug.
The runlevels field may contain multiple characters for different runlevels. For example,123 specifies that the process should be started in runlevels 1, 2, and 3. Therunlevels for ondemand entries may contain an A,B, or C. The runlevels field of sysinit, boot, and bootwait entries are ignored.
When the system runlevel is changed, any running processes that are not specified for the new runlevel are killed, first with SIGTERM, then with SIGKILL.
Valid actions for the action field are:
-
respawn
-
The process will be restarted whenever it terminates (e.g. getty).
-
wait
-
The process will be started once when the specified runlevel is entered and
init will wait for its termination.
-
once
-
The process will be executed once when the specified runlevel is entered.
-
boot
-
The process will be executed during system boot. The
runlevels field is ignored.
-
bootwait
-
The process will be executed during system boot, while
init waits for its termination (e.g. /etc/rc). The
runlevels field is ignored.
-
off
-
This does nothing.
-
ondemand
-
A process marked with an
ondemand runlevel will be executed whenever the specified
ondemand runlevel is called. However, no runlevel change will occur (
ondemand runlevels are `a', `b', and `c').
-
initdefault
-
An
initdefault entry specifies the runlevel which should be entered after system boot. If none exists,
init will ask for a runlevel on the console. The
process field is ignored.
-
sysinit
-
The process will be executed during system boot. It will be executed before any
boot or
bootwait entries. The
runlevels field is ignored.
-
powerwait
-
The process will be executed when the power goes down. Init is usually informed about this by a process talking to a UPS connected to the computer.
Init will wait for the process to finish before continuing.
-
powerfail
-
As for
powerwait, except that
init does not wait for the process's completion.
-
powerokwait
-
This process will be executed as soon as
init is informormed that the power has been restored.
-
powerfailnow
-
This process will be executed when
init is told that the battery of the external UPS is almost empty and the power is failing (provided that the external UPS and the monitoring process are able to detect this condition).
-
ctrlaltdel
-
The process will be executed when
init receives the SIGINT signal. This means that someone on the system console has pressed the
CTRL-ALT-DEL key combination. Typically one wants to execute some sort of
shutdown either to get into single-user level or to reboot the machine.
-
kbrequest
-
The process will be executed when
init receives a signal from the keyboard handler that a special key combination was pressed on the console keyboard.
The documentation for this function is not complete yet; more documentation can be found in the kbd-x.xx packages (most recent was kbd-0.94 at the time of this writing). Basically you want to map some keyboard combination to the "KeyboardSignal" action. For example, to map Alt-Uparrow for this purpose use the following in your keymaps file:
-
alt keycode 103 = KeyboardSignal
EXAMPLES
This is an example of a inittab which resembles the old Linux inittab:
-
# inittab for linux
id:1:initdefault:
rc::bootwait:/etc/rc
1:1:respawn:/etc/getty 9600 tty1
2:1:respawn:/etc/getty 9600 tty2
3:1:respawn:/etc/getty 9600 tty3
4:1:respawn:/etc/getty 9600 tty4
This inittab file executes
/etc/rc during boot and starts gettys on tty1-tty4.
A more elaborate inittab with different runlevels (see the comments inside):
-
# Level to run in
id:2:initdefault:
# System initialization before anything else.
si::sysinit:/etc/rc.d/bcheckrc
# Runlevel 0,6 is halt and reboot, 1 is maintenance mode.
l0:0:wait:/etc/rc.d/rc.halt
l1:1:wait:/etc/rc.d/rc.single
l2:2345:wait:/etc/rc.d/rc.multi
l6:6:wait:/etc/rc.d/rc.reboot
# What to do at the "3 finger salute".
ca::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t5 -rf now
# Runlevel 2&3: getty on console, level 3 also getty on modem port.
1:23:respawn:/sbin/getty tty1 VC linux
2:23:respawn:/sbin/getty tty2 VC linux
3:23:respawn:/sbin/getty tty3 VC linux
4:23:respawn:/sbin/getty tty4 VC linux
S2:3:respawn:/sbin/uugetty ttyS2 M19200
FILES
/etc/inittab
AUTHOR
Init was written by Miquel van Smoorenburg (
[email protected]). This manual page was written by Sebastian Lederer (
[email protected]) and modified by Michael Haardt (
[email protected]).
SEE ALSO
init(8),
telinit(8)
Index
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NAME
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DESCRIPTION
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EXAMPLES
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FILES
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AUTHOR
-
SEE ALSO
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