1.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1991, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by 5.\" Donn Seeley at Berkeley Software Design, Inc. 6.\" 7.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 8.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 9.\" are met: 10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 14.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 15.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 16.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 17.\" without specific prior written permission. 18.\" 19.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 20.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 21.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 22.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 23.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 24.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 25.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 26.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 27.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 28.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 29.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 30.\" 31.\" @(#)init.8 8.3 (Berkeley) 4/18/94 32.\" $FreeBSD$ 33.\" 34.Dd September 15, 2005 35.Dt INIT 8 36.Os 37.Sh NAME 38.Nm init 39.Nd process control initialization 40.Sh SYNOPSIS 41.Nm 42.Nm 43.Oo 44.Cm 0 | 1 | 6 | 45.Cm c | q 46.Oc 47.Sh DESCRIPTION 48The 49.Nm 50utility 51is the last stage of the boot process. 52It normally runs the automatic reboot sequence as described in 53.Xr rc 8 , 54and if this succeeds, begins multi-user operation. 55If the reboot scripts fail, 56.Nm 57commences single-user operation by giving 58the super-user a shell on the console. 59The 60.Nm 61utility may be passed parameters 62from the boot program to 63prevent the system from going multi-user and to instead execute 64a single-user shell without starting the normal daemons. 65The system is then quiescent for maintenance work and may 66later be made to go to multi-user by exiting the 67single-user shell (with ^D). 68This 69causes 70.Nm 71to run the 72.Pa /etc/rc 73start up command file in fastboot mode (skipping disk checks). 74.Pp 75If the 76.Em console 77entry in the 78.Xr ttys 5 79file is marked 80.Dq insecure , 81then 82.Nm 83will require that the super-user password be 84entered before the system will start a single-user shell. 85The password check is skipped if the 86.Em console 87is marked as 88.Dq secure . 89.Pp 90If the system security level (see 91.Xr security 7 ) 92is initially nonzero, then 93.Nm 94leaves it unchanged. 95Otherwise, 96.Nm 97raises the level to 1 before going multi-user for the first time. 98Since the level cannot be reduced, it will be at least 1 for 99subsequent operation, even on return to single-user. 100If a level higher than 1 is desired while running multi-user, 101it can be set before going multi-user, e.g., by the startup script 102.Xr rc 8 , 103using 104.Xr sysctl 8 105to set the 106.Va kern.securelevel 107variable to the required security level. 108.Pp 109If 110.Nm 111is run in a jail, the security level of the 112.Dq host system 113will not be effected. 114Part of the information set up in the kernel to support a jail 115is a per-jail security level. 116This allows running a higher security level inside of a jail 117than that of the host system. 118See 119.Xr jail 8 120for more information about jails. 121.Pp 122In multi-user operation, 123.Nm 124maintains 125processes for the terminal ports found in the file 126.Xr ttys 5 . 127The 128.Nm 129utility reads this file and executes the command found in the second field, 130unless the first field refers to a device in 131.Pa /dev 132which is not configured. 133The first field is supplied as the final argument to the command. 134This command is usually 135.Xr getty 8 ; 136.Nm getty 137opens and initializes the tty line 138and 139executes the 140.Xr login 1 141program. 142The 143.Nm login 144program, when a valid user logs in, 145executes a shell for that user. 146When this shell 147dies, either because the user logged out 148or an abnormal termination occurred (a signal), 149the 150.Nm 151utility wakes up, deletes the user 152from the 153.Xr utmp 5 154file of current users and records the logout in the 155.Xr wtmp 5 156file. 157The cycle is 158then restarted by 159.Nm 160executing a new 161.Nm getty 162for the line. 163.Pp 164The 165.Nm 166utility can also be used to keep arbitrary daemons running, 167automatically restarting them if they die. 168In this case, the first field in the 169.Xr ttys 5 170file must not reference the path to a configured device node 171and will be passed to the daemon 172as the final argument on its command line. 173This is similar to the facility offered in the 174.At V 175.Pa /etc/inittab . 176.Pp 177Line status (on, off, secure, getty, or window information) 178may be changed in the 179.Xr ttys 5 180file without a reboot by sending the signal 181.Dv SIGHUP 182to 183.Nm 184with the command 185.Dq Li "kill -HUP 1" . 186On receipt of this signal, 187.Nm 188re-reads the 189.Xr ttys 5 190file. 191When a line is turned off in 192.Xr ttys 5 , 193.Nm 194will send a SIGHUP signal to the controlling process 195for the session associated with the line. 196For any lines that were previously turned off in the 197.Xr ttys 5 198file and are now on, 199.Nm 200executes the command specified in the second field. 201If the command or window field for a line is changed, 202the change takes effect at the end of the current 203login session (e.g., the next time 204.Nm 205starts a process on the line). 206If a line is commented out or deleted from 207.Xr ttys 5 , 208.Nm 209will not do anything at all to that line. 210However, it will complain that the relationship between lines 211in the 212.Xr ttys 5 213file and records in the 214.Xr utmp 5 215file is out of sync, 216so this practice is not recommended. 217.Pp 218The 219.Nm 220utility will terminate multi-user operations and resume single-user mode 221if sent a terminate 222.Pq Dv TERM 223signal, for example, 224.Dq Li "kill \-TERM 1" . 225If there are processes outstanding that are deadlocked (because of 226hardware or software failure), 227.Nm 228will not wait for them all to die (which might take forever), but 229will time out after 30 seconds and print a warning message. 230.Pp 231The 232.Nm 233utility will cease creating new processes 234and allow the system to slowly die away, if it is sent a terminal stop 235.Pq Dv TSTP 236signal, i.e.\& 237.Dq Li "kill \-TSTP 1" . 238A later hangup will resume full 239multi-user operations, or a terminate will start a single-user shell. 240This hook is used by 241.Xr reboot 8 242and 243.Xr halt 8 . 244.Pp 245The 246.Nm 247utility will terminate all possible processes (again, it will not wait 248for deadlocked processes) and reboot the machine if sent the interrupt 249.Pq Dv INT 250signal, i.e.\& 251.Dq Li "kill \-INT 1". 252This is useful for shutting the machine down cleanly from inside the kernel 253or from X when the machine appears to be hung. 254.Pp 255The 256.Nm 257utility will do the same, except it will halt the machine if sent 258the user defined signal 1 259.Pq Dv USR1 , 260or will halt and turn the power off (if hardware permits) if sent 261the user defined signal 2 262.Pq Dv USR2 . 263.Pp 264When shutting down the machine, 265.Nm 266will try to run the 267.Pa /etc/rc.shutdown 268script. 269This script can be used to cleanly terminate specific programs such 270as 271.Nm innd 272(the InterNetNews server). 273If this script does not terminate within 120 seconds, 274.Nm 275will terminate it. The timeout can be configured via the 276.Xr sysctl 8 277variable 278.Va kern.init_shutdown_timeout . 279.Pp 280The role of 281.Nm 282is so critical that if it dies, the system will reboot itself 283automatically. 284If, at bootstrap time, the 285.Nm 286process cannot be located, the system will panic with the message 287.Dq "panic: init died (signal %d, exit %d)" . 288.Pp 289If run as a user process as shown in the second synopsis line, 290.Nm 291will emulate 292.At V 293behavior, i.e., super-user can specify the desired 294.Em run-level 295on a command line, and 296.Nm 297will signal the original 298(PID 1) 299.Nm 300as follows: 301.Bl -column Run-level SIGTERM 302.It Sy "Run-level Signal Action 303.It Cm 0 Ta Dv SIGUSR2 Ta "Halt and turn the power off" 304.It Cm 1 Ta Dv SIGTERM Ta "Go to single-user mode" 305.It Cm 6 Ta Dv SIGINT Ta "Reboot the machine" 306.It Cm c Ta Dv SIGTSTP Ta "Block further logins" 307.It Cm q Ta Dv SIGHUP Ta Rescan the 308.Xr ttys 5 309file 310.El 311.Sh FILES 312.Bl -tag -width /etc/rc.shutdown -compact 313.It Pa /dev/console 314system console device 315.It Pa /dev/tty* 316terminal ports found in 317.Xr ttys 5 318.It Pa /var/run/utmp 319record of current users on the system 320.It Pa /var/log/wtmp 321record of all logins and logouts 322.It Pa /etc/ttys 323the terminal initialization information file 324.It Pa /etc/rc 325system startup commands 326.It Pa /etc/rc.shutdown 327system shutdown commands 328.El 329.Sh DIAGNOSTICS 330.Bl -diag 331.It "getty repeating too quickly on port %s, sleeping." 332A process being started to service a line is exiting quickly 333each time it is started. 334This is often caused by a ringing or noisy terminal line. 335.Bf -emphasis 336Init will sleep for 30 seconds, 337then continue trying to start the process. 338.Ef 339.It "some processes would not die; ps axl advised." 340A process 341is hung and could not be killed when the system was shutting down. 342This condition is usually caused by a process 343that is stuck in a device driver because of 344a persistent device error condition. 345.El 346.Sh SEE ALSO 347.Xr kill 1 , 348.Xr login 1 , 349.Xr sh 1 , 350.Xr ttys 5 , 351.Xr getty 8 , 352.Xr halt 8 , 353.Xr jail 8 , 354.Xr rc 8 , 355.Xr reboot 8 , 356.Xr security 7 , 357.Xr shutdown 8 , 358.Xr sysctl 8 359.Sh HISTORY 360An 361.Nm 362utility appeared in 363.At v6 . 364.Sh CAVEATS 365Systems without 366.Xr sysctl 8 367behave as though they have security level \-1. 368.Pp 369Setting the security level above 1 too early in the boot sequence can 370prevent 371.Xr fsck 8 372from repairing inconsistent file systems. 373The 374preferred location to set the security level is at the end of 375.Pa /etc/rc 376after all multi-user startup actions are complete. 377