1.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1991, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Portions of this manual page are Copyrighted by 5.\" The NetBSD Foundation. 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.\" 3. 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.\" @(#)rc.8 8.2 (Berkeley) 12/11/93 32.\" $FreeBSD$ 33.\" 34.Dd July 4, 2022 35.Dt RC 8 36.Os 37.Sh NAME 38.Nm rc 39.Nd command scripts for auto-reboot and daemon startup 40.Sh SYNOPSIS 41.Nm 42.Nm rc.conf 43.Nm rc.conf.local 44.Nm rc.d/ 45.Nm rc.firewall 46.Nm rc.local 47.Nm rc.resume 48.Nm rc.shutdown 49.Nm rc.subr 50.Sh DESCRIPTION 51The 52.Nm 53utility is the command script which controls the automatic boot process 54after being called by 55.Xr init 8 . 56The 57.Nm rc.local 58script contains commands which are pertinent only 59to a specific site. 60Typically, the 61.Pa /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ 62mechanism is used instead of 63.Nm rc.local 64these days but if 65you want to use 66.Nm rc.local , 67it is still supported. 68In this case, it should source 69.Pa /etc/rc.conf 70and contain additional custom startup code for your system. 71The best way to handle 72.Nm rc.local , 73however, is to separate it out into 74.Nm rc.d/ 75style scripts and place them under 76.Pa /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ . 77The 78.Nm rc.conf 79file contains the global system configuration information referenced 80by the startup scripts, while 81.Nm rc.conf.local 82contains the local system configuration. 83See 84.Xr rc.conf 5 85for more information. 86.Pp 87The 88.Nm rc.d/ 89directories contain scripts which will be automatically 90executed at boot time and shutdown time. 91.Pp 92The 93.Xr service 8 94command provides a convenient interface to manage rc.d services. 95.Pp 96The 97.Xr sysrc 8 98command provides a scripting interface to modify system config files. 99.Ss Operation of Nm 100.Bl -enum 101.It 102If autobooting, set 103.Va autoboot Ns = Ns Li yes 104and enable a flag 105.Pq Va rc_fast Ns = Ns Li yes , 106which prevents the 107.Nm rc.d/ 108scripts from performing the check for already running processes 109(thus speeding up the boot process). 110This 111.Va rc_fast Ns = Ns Li yes 112speedup will not occur when 113.Nm 114is started up after exiting the single-user shell. 115.It 116Determine whether the system is booting diskless, 117and if so run the 118.Pa /etc/rc.initdiskless 119script. 120.It 121Source 122.Pa /etc/rc.subr 123to load various 124.Xr rc.subr 8 125shell functions to use. 126.It 127Load the configuration files. 128.It 129Determine if booting in a jail, 130and add 131.Dq Li nojail 132(no jails allowed) or 133.Dq Li nojailvnet 134(only allow vnet-enabled jails) to the list of KEYWORDS to skip in 135.Xr rcorder 8 . 136.It 137If the file 138.Va ${firstboot_sentinel} 139does not exist, add 140.Dq Li firstboot 141to the list of KEYWORDS to skip in 142.Xr rcorder 8 . 143.It 144Invoke 145.Xr rcorder 8 146to order the files in 147.Pa /etc/rc.d/ 148that do not have a 149.Dq Li nostart 150KEYWORD (refer to 151.Xr rcorder 8 Ns 's 152.Fl s 153flag). 154.It 155Call each script in turn using 156.Fn run_rc_script 157(from 158.Xr rc.subr 8 ) , 159which sets 160.Va $1 161to 162.Dq Li start , 163and sources the script in a subshell. 164Stop processing when the script that is the value of the 165.Va $early_late_divider 166has been run. 167.It 168Check again to see if the file 169.Va ${firstboot_sentinel} 170exists (in case it is located on a newly mounted file system) 171and adjust the list of KEYWORDs to skip appropriately. 172.It 173Re-run 174.Xr rcorder 8 , 175this time including the scripts in the 176.Va $local_startup 177directories. 178Ignore everything up to the 179.Va $early_late_divider , 180then start executing the scripts as described above. 181.It 182If the file 183.Va ${firstboot_sentinel} 184exists, delete it. 185If the file 186.Va ${firstboot_sentinel}-reboot 187also exists (because it was created by a script), then delete it and reboot. 188.El 189.Ss Operation of Nm rc.shutdown 190.Bl -enum 191.It 192Set 193.Va rc_shutdown 194to the value of the first argument passed to 195.Nm rc.shutdown 196or to 197.Dq Li unspecified 198if no argument was passed. 199.It 200Source 201.Pa /etc/rc.subr 202to load various 203.Xr rc.subr 8 204shell functions to use. 205.It 206Load the configuration files. 207.It 208Invoke 209.Xr rcorder 8 210to order the files in 211.Pa /etc/rc.d/ 212and the 213.Va $local_startup 214directories 215that have a 216.Dq Li shutdown 217KEYWORD (refer to 218.Xr rcorder 8 Ns 's 219.Fl k 220flag), 221reverse that order, and assign the result to a variable. 222.It 223Call each script in turn using 224.Fn run_rc_script 225(from 226.Xr rc.subr 8 ) , 227which sets 228.Va $1 229to 230.Dq Li faststop , 231and sources the script in a subshell. 232.El 233.Ss Contents of Nm rc.d/ 234.Nm rc.d/ 235is located in 236.Pa /etc/rc.d/ . 237The following file naming conventions are currently used in 238.Nm rc.d/ : 239.Bl -tag -width ".Pa ALLUPPERCASE" -offset indent 240.It Pa ALLUPPERCASE 241Scripts that are 242.Dq placeholders 243to ensure that certain operations are performed before others. 244In order of startup, these are: 245.Bl -tag -width ".Pa FILESYSTEMS" 246.It Pa FILESYSTEMS 247Ensure that root and other critical file systems are mounted. 248This is the default 249.Va $early_late_divider . 250.It Pa NETWORKING 251Ensure basic network services are running, including general 252network configuration. 253.It Pa SERVERS 254Ensure basic services 255exist for services that start early (such as 256.Pa nisdomain ) , 257because they are required by 258.Pa DAEMON 259below. 260.It Pa DAEMON 261Check-point before all general purpose daemons such as 262.Pa lpd 263and 264.Pa ntpd . 265.It Pa LOGIN 266Check-point before user login services 267.Pa ( inetd 268and 269.Pa sshd ) , 270as well as services which might run commands as users 271.Pa ( cron 272and 273.Pa sendmail ) . 274.El 275.It Pa bar 276Scripts that are sourced in a subshell. 277The boot does not stop if such a script terminates with a non-zero status, 278but a script can stop the boot if necessary by invoking the 279.Fn stop_boot 280function (from 281.Xr rc.subr 8 ) . 282.El 283.Pp 284Each script should contain 285.Xr rcorder 8 286keywords, especially an appropriate 287.Dq Li PROVIDE 288entry, and if necessary 289.Dq Li REQUIRE 290and 291.Dq Li BEFORE 292keywords. 293.Pp 294Each script is expected to support at least the following arguments, which 295are automatically supported if it uses the 296.Fn run_rc_command 297function: 298.Bl -tag -width ".Cm restart" -offset indent 299.It Cm start 300Start the service. 301This should check that the service is to be started as specified by 302.Xr rc.conf 5 . 303Also checks if the service is already running and refuses to start if 304it is. 305This latter check is not performed by standard 306.Fx 307scripts if the system is starting directly to multi-user mode, to 308speed up the boot process. 309If 310.Cm forcestart 311is given, ignore the 312.Xr rc.conf 5 313check and start anyway. 314.It Cm stop 315If the service is to be started as specified by 316.Xr rc.conf 5 , 317stop the service. 318This should check that the service is running and complain if it is not. 319If 320.Cm forcestop 321is given, ignore the 322.Xr rc.conf 5 323check and attempt to stop. 324.It Cm restart 325Perform a 326.Cm stop 327then a 328.Cm start . 329.It Cm status 330If the script starts a process (rather than performing a one-off 331operation), show the status of the process. 332Otherwise it is not necessary to support this argument. 333Defaults to displaying the process ID of the program (if running). 334.It Cm enable 335Enable the service in 336.Xr rc.conf 5 . 337.It Cm disable 338Disable the service in 339.Xr rc.conf 5 . 340.It Cm delete 341Remove the service from 342.Xr rc.conf 5 . 343If 344.Ql Li service_delete_empty 345is set to 346.Dq Li YES , 347.Pa /etc/rc.conf.d/$servicename 348will be deleted if empty after modification. 349.It Cm describe 350Print a short description of what the script does. 351.It Cm extracommands 352Print the script's non-standard commands. 353.It Cm poll 354If the script starts a process (rather than performing a one-off 355operation), wait for the command to exit. 356Otherwise it is not necessary to support this argument. 357.It Cm enabled 358Return 0 if the service is enabled and 1 if it is not. 359This command does not print anything. 360.It Cm rcvar 361Display which 362.Xr rc.conf 5 363variables are used to control the startup of the service (if any). 364.El 365.Pp 366If a script must implement additional commands it can list them in 367the 368.Va extra_commands 369variable, and define their actions in a variable constructed from 370the command name (see the 371.Sx EXAMPLES 372section). 373.Pp 374The following key points apply to old-style scripts in 375.Pa /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ : 376.Bl -bullet 377.It 378Scripts are only executed if their 379.Xr basename 1 380matches the shell globbing pattern 381.Pa *.sh , 382and they are executable. 383Any other files or directories present within the directory are silently 384ignored. 385.It 386When a script is executed at boot time, it is passed the string 387.Dq Li start 388as its first and only argument. 389At shutdown time, it is passed the string 390.Dq Li stop 391as its first and only argument. 392All 393.Nm rc.d/ 394scripts are expected to handle these arguments appropriately. 395If no action needs to be taken at a given time 396(either boot time or shutdown time), 397the script should exit successfully and without producing an error message. 398.It 399The scripts within each directory are executed in lexicographical order. 400If a specific order is required, 401numbers may be used as a prefix to the existing filenames, 402so for example 403.Pa 100.foo 404would be executed before 405.Pa 200.bar ; 406without the numeric prefixes the opposite would be true. 407.It 408The output from each script is traditionally a space character, 409followed by the name of the software package being started or shut down, 410.Em without 411a trailing newline character. 412.El 413.Sh SCRIPTS OF INTEREST 414When an automatic reboot is in progress, 415.Nm 416is invoked with the argument 417.Cm autoboot . 418One of the scripts run from 419.Pa /etc/rc.d/ 420is 421.Pa /etc/rc.d/fsck . 422This script runs 423.Xr fsck 8 424with option 425.Fl p 426and 427.Fl F 428to 429.Dq preen 430all the disks of minor inconsistencies resulting 431from the last system shutdown. 432If this fails, then checks/repairs of serious inconsistencies 433caused by hardware or software failure will be performed 434in the background at the end of the booting process. 435If 436.Cm autoboot 437is not set, when going from single-user to multi-user mode for example, 438the script does not do anything. 439.Pp 440The 441.Pa /etc/rc.d/local 442script can execute scripts from multiple 443.Nm rc.d/ 444directories. 445The default location includes 446.Pa /usr/local/etc/rc.d/ , 447but these may be overridden with the 448.Va local_startup 449.Xr rc.conf 5 450variable. 451.Pp 452The 453.Pa /etc/rc.d/serial 454script is used to set any special configurations for serial devices. 455.Pp 456The 457.Nm rc.firewall 458script is used to configure rules for the kernel based firewall 459service. 460It has several possible options: 461.Pp 462.Bl -tag -width ".Ar filename" -compact -offset indent 463.It Cm open 464will allow anyone in 465.It Cm client 466will try to protect just this machine 467.It Cm simple 468will try to protect a whole network 469.It Cm closed 470totally disables IP services except via 471.Pa lo0 472interface 473.It Cm UNKNOWN 474disables the loading of firewall rules 475.It Ar filename 476will load the rules in the given filename (full path required). 477.El 478.Pp 479Most daemons, including network related daemons, have their own script in 480.Pa /etc/rc.d/ , 481which can be used to start, stop, and check the status of the service. 482.Pp 483Any architecture specific scripts, such as 484.Pa /etc/rc.d/apm 485for example, specifically check that they are on that architecture 486before starting the daemon. 487.Pp 488Following tradition, all startup files reside in 489.Pa /etc . 490.Sh FILES 491.Bl -tag -compact -width Pa 492.It Pa /etc/rc 493.It Pa /etc/rc.conf 494.It Pa /etc/rc.conf.local 495.It Pa /etc/rc.d/ 496.It Pa /etc/rc.firewall 497.It Pa /etc/rc.local 498.It Pa /etc/rc.shutdown 499.It Pa /etc/rc.subr 500.It Pa /var/run/dmesg.boot 501.Xr dmesg 8 502results soon after the 503.Nm 504process begins. 505Useful when 506.Xr dmesg 8 507buffer in the kernel no longer has this information. 508.El 509.Sh EXAMPLES 510The following is a minimal 511.Nm rc.d/ 512style script. 513Most scripts require little more than the following. 514.Bd -literal -offset indent 515#!/bin/sh 516# 517 518# PROVIDE: foo 519# REQUIRE: bar_service_required_to_precede_foo 520 521\&. /etc/rc.subr 522 523name="foo" 524rcvar=foo_enable 525command="/usr/local/bin/foo" 526 527load_rc_config $name 528run_rc_command "$1" 529.Ed 530.Pp 531Certain scripts may want to provide enhanced functionality. 532The user may access this functionality through additional commands. 533The script may list and define as many commands at it needs. 534.Bd -literal -offset indent 535#!/bin/sh 536# 537 538# PROVIDE: foo 539# REQUIRE: bar_service_required_to_precede_foo 540# BEFORE: baz_service_requiring_foo_to_precede_it 541 542\&. /etc/rc.subr 543 544name="foo" 545rcvar=foo_enable 546command="/usr/local/bin/foo" 547extra_commands="nop hello" 548hello_cmd="echo Hello World." 549nop_cmd="do_nop" 550 551do_nop() 552{ 553 echo "I do nothing." 554} 555 556load_rc_config $name 557run_rc_command "$1" 558.Ed 559.Pp 560As all processes are killed by 561.Xr init 8 562at shutdown, the explicit 563.Xr kill 1 564is unnecessary, but is often included. 565.Sh SEE ALSO 566.Xr kill 1 , 567.Xr rc.conf 5 , 568.Xr init 8 , 569.Xr rc.resume 8 , 570.Xr rc.subr 8 , 571.Xr rcorder 8 , 572.Xr reboot 8 , 573.Xr savecore 8 , 574.Xr service 8 , 575.Xr sysrc 8 576.Pp 577.Rs 578.%T "Practical rc.d scripting in BSD" 579.%U "https://docs.freebsd.org/en/articles/rc-scripting/" 580.Re 581.Sh HISTORY 582The 583.Nm 584utility appeared in 585.Bx 4.0 . 586