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installman(1M)

ttymon(1M)

shutdown(1M)

inittab(4)

utmp(4)

termio(7)

login(1)

sh(1)

stty(1)

who(1)

kill(2)

appropriate_privilege(5)

cap_defaults(5)



init(1M)                       DG/UX R4.11MU05                      init(1M)


NAME
       init, telinit - process control initialization

SYNOPSIS
       /sbin/init [0i123456KkSsTtQqabc]

       /sbin/telinit [0i123456KkSsTtQqabc]

DESCRIPTION
       init is a general process spawner.  Its primary role is to create
       processes from information stored in the file /etc/inittab [see
       inittab(4)].

       At any given time, the system is in one of eight possible run levels.
       A run level is a software configuration of the system under which
       only a selected group of processes exist.  The processes spawned by
       init for each of these run levels is defined in /etc/inittab.  init
       can be in one of eight run levels, 0-6 and S or s (run levels S and s
       are identical).  The run level changes when a privileged user runs
       /sbin/init.  This user-spawned init sends appropriate signals to the
       original init spawned by the operating system when the system was
       booted, telling it which run level to change to.

       The following are the arguments to init.


              0      shut the machine down so it is safe to remove the
                     power.  Have the machine remove power if it can.

              i      put the system in installation mode.  All local file
                     systems are mounted and a small set of essential kernel
                     processes are running.  The installman(1M) program is
                     invoked to perform initial installation steps.

              1      put the system in system administrator mode.  All file
                     systems are mounted.  Only a small set of essential
                     kernel processes are left running.  This mode is for
                     administrative tasks such as installing optional
                     utility packages.  All files are accessible and no
                     users are logged in on the system.

              2      put the system in multi-user mode.  All multi-user
                     environment terminal processes and daemons are spawned.
                     This state is commonly referred to as the multi-user
                     state.

              3      start the remote file sharing processes and daemons.
                     Mount and advertise remote resources.  Run level 3
                     extends multi-user mode and is known as the remote-
                     file-sharing state.

              4      is available to be defined as an alternative multi-user
                     environment configuration.  It is not necessary for
                     system operation and is usually not used.

              5      Stop the system and go to the firmware monitor.
                     Bringing the system to this state is functionally
                     equivalent to bringing it to init state s then entering
                     the halt(1M) command.

              6      Stop the system and reboot to the state defined by the
                     initdefault entry in /etc/inittab.  Bringing the system
                     to this state is functionally equivalent to bringing it
                     to init state s then entering the reboot(1M) command
                     with a boot-path and no run level.

              a,b,c  process only those /etc/inittab entries having the a,
                     b, or c run level set.  These are pseudo-states, which
                     may be defined to run certain commands, but which do
                     not cause the current run level to change.  These
                     pseudo-levels are not executed at run level S.  That
                     are only executed at level 1 or higher.

              Q,q    re-examine /etc/inittab.

              S,s    enter single-user mode.  When this occurs, the terminal
                     which executed this command becomes the system console.
                     This is the only run level that doesn't require the
                     existence of a properly formatted /etc/inittab file.
                     If this file does not exist, then by default the only
                     legal run level that init can enter is the single-user
                     mode.  When the system comes up to S or s, file systems
                     for users' files are not mounted and only essential
                     kernel processes are running.

                     When the system comes down to S or s, all mounted file
                     systems remain mounted, and init kills all processes it
                     started directly from /etc/inittab that should not be
                     running in single-user mode.  In addition, any process
                     that has a utmp entry will be killed.  This last
                     condition insures that all port monitors started by the
                     SAC are killed and all services started by these port
                     monitors, including ttymon login services, are killed.
                     Other processes not started directly by init will
                     remain running.  For example, cron remains running.


              T,t    enter single-user mode from run level 1, 2, 3 or 4.
                     init T brings the system to the state it would be in if
                     it were booted up to single-user mode.  To get to this
                     state, init first tries to execute rc.init S
                     >/dev/console 2>&1 to shutdown the system gracefully;
                     the current login session will be terminated.  If
                     rc.init S fails, init will shut down the system and
                     halt the processor(s).  init T is similar to init S
                     except it kills all processes not required at single
                     user mode and attempts to unmount all unused
                     filesystems except / and /usr.


              K,k    enter single-user mode from run level 1, 2, 3 or 4 in
                     order to enforce system repair and reboot.  init K
                     brings the system to the state it would be in if it
                     were booted up to single-user mode.  To get to this
                     state, init first tries to execute rc.init S
                     >/dev/console 2>&1 to shutdown the system gracefully;
                     the current login session will be terminated.  If
                     rc.init S fails, init will shut down the system and
                     halt the processor(s).  init will not allow the
                     privileged user to move to run level 1, 2, 3 or 4.
                     init K is similar to init T except in order to bring
                     the system to run level 1, 2, 3 or 4, the privileged
                     user must first repair, then explicitly reboot the
                     system.


       When a DG/UX system is booted, init is invoked and the following
       occurs.  First, init attempts to fsck and mount /usr using the /usr
       entry in /etc/fstab.  If there is no /etc/fstab but there is an
       /etc/fstab.proto, init copies /etc/fstab.proto to /etc/fstab and then
       attempts the mount operation.  The sequence is equivalent to:

       if   [ ! -f /etc/fstab ] &&
            [ -f /etc/fstab.proto ]
       then
            cp /etc/fstab.proto /etc/fstab
       fi
       mount -f /
       fsck -xq /usr
       mount /usr

       Next, init looks in /etc/inittab for the initdefault entry [see
       inittab(4)].  If there is one, init will usually use the run level
       specified in that entry as the initial run level to enter.  If there
       is no initdefault entry in /etc/inittab, init requests that the user
       enter a run level from the virtual system console.  If an S or s is
       entered, init goes to the single-user state.  If /usr was not mounted
       successfully, then single-user state is entered regardless of the
       initdefault setting in inittab.  In the single-user state the virtual
       console terminal is assigned to the user's terminal and is opened for
       reading and writing.  The command /sbin/su is invoked and a message
       is generated on the physical console saying where the virtual console
       has been relocated.  Use either init or telinit to signal init to
       change the run level of the system.  Note that if the shell is
       terminated (via an end-of-file), init will only re-initialize to the
       single-user state if the /etc/inittab file does not exist.

       If a 0 through 6 is entered, init enters the corresponding run level
       if /usr is mounted.  init will not permit a state change if /usr is
       not mounted.  Run levels 0, 5, and 6 are reserved states for shutting
       the system down.  Run levels 2, 3, and 4 are available as multi-user
       operating states.

       If this is the first time since power up that init has entered a run
       level other than single-user state, init first scans /etc/inittab for
       boot and bootwait entries [see inittab(4)].  These entries are
       performed before any other processing of /etc/inittab takes place,
       providing that the run level entered matches that of the entry.  In
       this way any special initialization of the operating system, such as
       mounting file systems, can take place before users are allowed onto
       the system.  init then scans /etc/inittab and executes all other
       entries that are to be processed for that run level.

       To spawn each process in /etc/inittab, init reads each entry and for
       each entry that should be respawned, it forks a child process.  After
       it has spawned all of the processes specified by /etc/inittab, init
       waits for one of its descendant processes to die, a powerfail signal,
       or a signal from another init or telinit process to change the
       system's run level.  When one of these conditions occurs, init re-
       examines /etc/inittab.  New entries can be added to /etc/inittab at
       any time; however, init still waits for one of the above three
       conditions to occur before re-examining /etc/inittab.  To get around
       this, init Q or init q command wakes init to re-examine /etc/inittab
       immediately.

       When init comes up at boot time and whenever the system changes from
       the single-user state to another run state, init sets the ioctl(2)
       states of the virtual console to those modes saved in the file
       /etc/ioctl.syscon.  This file is written by init whenever the single-
       user state is entered.

       When a run level change request is made init sends the warning signal
       (SIGTERM) to all processes that are undefined in the target run
       level.  init waits five seconds before forcibly terminating these
       processes via the kill signal (SIGKILL).

       The shell running on each terminal will terminate when the user types
       an end-of-file or hangs up.  When init receives a signal telling it
       that a process it spawned has died, it records the fact and the
       reason it died in /etc/utmp and /etc/wtmp if it exists [see who(1)].
       A history of the processes spawned is kept in /etc/wtmp.

       If init receives a powerfail signal (SIGPWR) it scans /etc/inittab
       for special entries of the type powerfail and powerwait.  These
       entries are invoked (if the run levels permit) before any further
       processing takes place.  In this way init can perform various cleanup
       and recording functions during the powerdown of the operating system.

       telinit, which is linked to /sbin/init, is used to direct the actions
       of init.  It takes a one-character argument and signals init to take
       the appropriate action.

FILES
       /etc/inittab
       /etc/utmp
       /etc/wtmp
       /etc/ioctl.syscon
       /dev/console

SEE ALSO
       installman(1M), ttymon(1M), shutdown(1M), inittab(4), utmp(4),
       termio(7).
       login(1), sh(1), stty(1), who(1).
       kill(2).
       appropriate_privilege(5).
       cap_defaults(5).

DIAGNOSTICS
       If init finds that it is respawning an entry from /etc/inittab more
       than ten times in two minutes, it will assume that there is an error
       in the command string in the entry, and generate an error message on
       the system console.  It will then refuse to respawn this entry until
       either five minutes has elapsed or it receives a signal from a user-
       spawned init or telinit.  This prevents init from eating up system
       resources when someone makes a typographical error in the inittab
       file or a program is removed that is referenced in /etc/inittab.

       When attempting to boot the system, failure of init to prompt for a
       new run level may be because the virtual system console is linked to
       a device other than the physical system console.

NOTES
       init and telinit can be run only by a user with appropriate
       privilege.  For systems supporting the DG/UX Capability Option,
       appropriate privilege is defined as having one or more specific
       capabilities enabled in the effective capability set of the user.
       See cap_defaults(5) for the default capabilities for this command.

       On systems without the DG/UX Capability Option, appropriate privilege
       means that your process has an effective UID of root.  See the
       appropriate_privilege(5) man page for more information.

       The S or s state must not be used indiscriminately in the
       /etc/inittab file.  A good rule to follow when modifying this file is
       to avoid adding this state to any line other than the initdefault.

       If a default state is not specified in the initdefault entry in
       /etc/inittab, state ``s'' is entered.

       If the utmp file cannot be created when booting the system, the
       system will boot to state ``s'' regardless of the state specified in
       the initdefault entry in /etc/inittab.  This can happen if the root
       filesystem is not accessible.


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Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026