Home | History | Annotate | Line # | Download | only in etc
rc revision 1.168
      1 #!/bin/sh
      2 #
      3 # $NetBSD: rc,v 1.168 2014/04/09 12:45:05 apb Exp $
      4 #
      5 # rc --
      6 #	Run the scripts in /etc/rc.d with rcorder, and log output
      7 #	to /var/run/rc.log.
      8 
      9 #	System startup script run by init(8) on autoboot or after single-user.
     10 #	Output and error are redirected to console by init, and the console
     11 #	is the controlling terminal.
     12 
     13 export HOME=/
     14 export PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
     15 umask 022
     16 
     17 if [ -e ./rc.subr ] ; then
     18 	. ./rc.subr # for testing
     19 else
     20 	. /etc/rc.subr
     21 fi
     22 . /etc/rc.conf
     23 _rc_conf_loaded=true
     24 
     25 : ${RC_LOG_FILE:="/var/run/rc.log"}
     26 
     27 # rc.subr redefines echo and printf.  Undo that here.
     28 unset echo ; unalias echo
     29 unset printf ; unalias printf
     30 
     31 if ! checkyesno rc_configured; then
     32 	echo "/etc/rc.conf is not configured.  Multiuser boot aborted."
     33 	exit 1
     34 fi
     35 
     36 if [ "$1" = autoboot ]; then
     37 	autoboot=yes
     38 	rc_fast=yes	# run_rc_command(): do fast booting
     39 fi
     40 
     41 #
     42 # Completely ignore INT and QUIT at the outer level.  The rc_real_work()
     43 # function should do something different.
     44 #
     45 trap '' INT QUIT
     46 
     47 #
     48 # This string will be used to mark lines of meta-data sent over the pipe
     49 # from the rc_real_work() function to the rc_postprocess() function.  Lines
     50 # not so marked are assumed to be output from rc.d scripts.
     51 #
     52 # This string is long and unique to ensure that it does not accidentally
     53 # appear in output from any rc.d script.  It must not contain any
     54 # characters that are special to glob expansion ('*', '?', '[', or ']').
     55 #
     56 rc_metadata_prefix="$0:$$:metadata:";
     57 
     58 # Child scripts may sometimes want to print directly to the original
     59 # stdout and stderr, bypassing the pipe to the postprocessor.  These
     60 # _rc_*_fd variables are private, shared with /etc/rc.subr, but not
     61 # intended to be used directly by child scripts.  (Child scripts
     62 # may use rc.subr's no_rc_postprocess function.)
     63 #
     64 _rc_original_stdout_fd=7; export _rc_original_stdout_fd
     65 _rc_original_stderr_fd=8; export _rc_original_stderr_fd
     66 eval "exec ${_rc_original_stdout_fd}>&1"
     67 eval "exec ${_rc_original_stderr_fd}>&2"
     68 
     69 #
     70 # rc_real_work
     71 #	Do the real work.  Output from this function will be piped into
     72 #	rc_postprocess(), and some of the output will be marked as
     73 #	metadata.
     74 #
     75 # The body of this function is defined using (...), not {...}, to force
     76 # it to run in a subshell.
     77 #
     78 rc_real_work()
     79 (
     80 	stty status '^T'
     81 
     82 	# print_rc_metadata() wants to be able to print to the pipe
     83 	# that goes to our postprocessor, even if its in a context
     84 	# with redirected output.
     85 	#
     86 	_rc_postprocessor_fd=9 ; export _rc_postprocessor_fd
     87 	eval "exec ${_rc_postprocessor_fd}>&1"
     88 
     89 	# Print a metadata line when we exit
     90 	#
     91 	trap 'es=$?; print_rc_metadata "exit:$es"; trap "" 0; exit $es' 0
     92 
     93 	#	Set shell to ignore SIGINT, but children will not ignore it.
     94 	#	Shell catches SIGQUIT and returns to single user.
     95 	#
     96 	trap : INT
     97 	trap '_msg="Boot interrupted at $(date)";
     98 	      print_rc_metadata "interrupted:${_msg}";
     99 	      exit 1' QUIT
    100 
    101 	print_rc_metadata "start:$(date)"
    102 
    103 	#
    104 	# The stop_boot() function in rc.subr may kill $RC_PID.  We want
    105 	# it to kill the subshell running this rc_real_work() function,
    106 	# rather than killing the parent shell, because we want the
    107 	# rc_postprocess() function to be able to log the error
    108 	# without being killed itself.
    109 	#
    110 	# "$$" is the pid of the top-level shell, not the pid of the
    111 	# subshell that's executing this function.  The command below
    112 	# tentatively assumes that the parent of the "/bin/sh -c ..."
    113 	# process will be the current subshell, and then uses "kill -0
    114 	# ..." to check the result.  If the "/bin/sh -c ..." process
    115 	# fails, or returns the pid of an ephemeral process that exits
    116 	# before the "kill" command, then we fall back to using "$$".
    117 	#
    118 	RC_PID=$(/bin/sh -c 'ps -p $$ -o ppid=') || RC_PID=$$
    119 	kill -0 $RC_PID >/dev/null 2>&1 || RC_PID=$$
    120 
    121 	#
    122 	# As long as process $RC_PID is still running, send a "nop"
    123 	# metadata message to the postprocessor every few seconds.
    124 	# This should help flush partial lines that may appear when
    125 	# rc.d scripts that are NOT marked with "KEYWORD: interactive"
    126 	# nevertheless attempt to print prompts and wait for input.
    127 	#
    128 	(
    129 	    while kill -0 $RC_PID ; do
    130 		print_rc_metadata "nop"
    131 		sleep 3
    132 	    done
    133 	) &
    134 
    135 	#
    136 	# Get a list of all rc.d scripts, and use rcorder to choose
    137 	# what order to execute them.
    138 	#
    139 	# For testing, allow RC_FILES_OVERRIDE from the environment to
    140 	# override this.
    141 	#
    142 	print_rc_metadata "cmd-name:rcorder"
    143 	scripts=$(for rcd in ${rc_directories:-/etc/rc.d}; do
    144 		test -d ${rcd} && echo ${rcd}/*;
    145 	done)
    146 	files=$(rcorder -s nostart ${rc_rcorder_flags} ${scripts})
    147 	print_rc_metadata "cmd-status:rcorder:$?"
    148 
    149 	if [ -n "${RC_FILES_OVERRIDE}" ]; then
    150 		files="${RC_FILES_OVERRIDE}"
    151 	fi
    152 
    153 	#
    154 	# Run the scripts in order.
    155 	#
    156 	for _rc_elem in $files; do
    157 		print_rc_metadata "cmd-name:$_rc_elem"
    158 		run_rc_script $_rc_elem start
    159 		print_rc_metadata "cmd-status:$_rc_elem:$?"
    160 	done
    161 
    162 	print_rc_metadata "end:$(date)"
    163 	exit 0
    164 )
    165 
    166 #
    167 # rc_postprocess
    168 #	Post-process the output from the rc_real_work() function.  For
    169 #	each line of input, we have to decide whether to print the line
    170 #	to the console, print a twiddle on the console, print a line to
    171 #	the log, or some combination of these.
    172 #
    173 #	If rc_silent is true, then suppress most output, instead running
    174 #	rc_silent_cmd (typically "twiddle") for each line.
    175 #
    176 # The body of this function is defined using (...), not {...}, to force
    177 # it to run in a subshell.
    178 #
    179 # We have to deal with the following constraints:
    180 #
    181 #  * There may be no writable file systems early in the boot, so
    182 #    any use of temporary files would be problematic.
    183 #
    184 #  * Scripts run during the boot may clear /tmp and/var/run, so even
    185 #    if they are writable, using those directories too early may be
    186 #    problematic.  We assume that it's safe to write to our log file
    187 #    after the mountcritlocal script has run.
    188 #
    189 #  * /usr/bin/tee cannot be used because the /usr file system may not
    190 #    be mounted early in the boot.
    191 #
    192 #  * All calls to the rc_log_message and rc_log_flush functions must be
    193 #    from the same subshell, otherwise the use of a shell variable to
    194 #    buffer log messages will fail.
    195 #
    196 rc_postprocess()
    197 (
    198 	local line
    199 	local before after
    200 	local IFS=''
    201 
    202 	# Try quite hard to flush the log to disk when we exit.
    203 	trap 'es=$?; rc_log_flush FORCE; trap "" 0; exit $es' 0
    204 
    205 	yesno_to_truefalse rc_silent 2>/dev/null
    206 
    207 	while read -r line ; do
    208 		case "$line" in
    209 		"${rc_metadata_prefix}"*)
    210 			after="${line#*"${rc_metadata_prefix}"}"
    211 			rc_postprocess_metadata "${after}"
    212 			;;
    213 		*"${rc_metadata_prefix}"*)
    214 			# magic string is present, but not at the start of
    215 			# the line.  Treat it as a partial line of
    216 			# ordinary data, followed by a line of metadata.
    217 			before="${line%"${rc_metadata_prefix}"*}"
    218 			rc_postprocess_partial_line "${before}"
    219 			after="${line#*"${rc_metadata_prefix}"}"
    220 			rc_postprocess_metadata "${after}"
    221 			;;
    222 		*)
    223 			rc_postprocess_plain_line "${line}"
    224 			;;
    225 		esac
    226 	done
    227 
    228 	# If we get here, then the rc_real_work() function must have
    229 	# exited uncleanly.  A clean exit would have been accompanied by
    230 	# a line of metadata that would have prevented us from getting
    231 	# here.
    232 	#
    233 	exit 1
    234 )
    235 
    236 #
    237 # rc_postprocess_plain_line string
    238 #	$1 is a string representing a line of output from one of the
    239 #	rc.d scripts.  Append the line to the log, and also either
    240 #	display the line on the console, or run $rc_silent_cmd,
    241 #	depending on the value of $rc_silent.
    242 #
    243 rc_postprocess_plain_line()
    244 {
    245 	local line="$1"
    246 	rc_log_message "${line}"
    247 	if $rc_silent; then
    248 		eval "$rc_silent_cmd"
    249 	else
    250 		printf "%s\n" "${line}"
    251 	fi
    252 }
    253 
    254 #
    255 # rc_postprocess_partial_line string
    256 #	This is just like rc_postprocess_plain_line, except that
    257 #	a newline is not appended to the string.
    258 #
    259 rc_postprocess_partial_line()
    260 {
    261 	local line="$1"
    262 	rc_log_message_n "${line}"
    263 	if $rc_silent; then
    264 		eval "$rc_silent_cmd"
    265 	else
    266 		printf "%s" "${line}"
    267 	fi
    268 }
    269 
    270 #
    271 # rc_postprocess_metadata string
    272 #	$1 is a string containing metadata from the rc_real_work()
    273 #	function.  The rc_metadata_prefix marker should already
    274 #	have been removed before the string is passed to this function.
    275 #	Take appropriate action depending on the content of the string.
    276 #
    277 rc_postprocess_metadata()
    278 {
    279 	local metadata="$1"
    280 	local keyword args
    281 	local msg
    282 	local IFS=':'
    283 
    284 	# given metadata="bleep:foo bar:baz",
    285 	# set keyword="bleep", args="foo bar:baz",
    286 	# $1="foo bar", $2="baz"
    287 	#
    288 	keyword="${metadata%%:*}"
    289 	args="${metadata#*:}"
    290 	set -- $args
    291 
    292 	case "$keyword" in
    293 	start)
    294 		# Marks the start of the entire /etc/rc script.
    295 		# $args contains a date/time.
    296 		rc_log_message "[$0 starting at $args]"
    297 		if ! $rc_silent; then
    298 			printf "%s\n" "$args"
    299 		fi
    300 		;;
    301 	cmd-name)
    302 		# Marks the start of a child script (usually one of
    303 		# the /etc/rc.d/* scripts).
    304 		rc_log_message "[running $1]"
    305 		;;
    306 	cmd-status)
    307 		# Marks the end of a child script.
    308 		# $1 is a command name, $2 is the command's exit status.
    309 		# If the command failed, report it, and add it to a list.
    310 		if [ "$2" != 0 ]; then
    311 			rc_failures="${rc_failures}${rc_failures:+ }$1"
    312 			msg="$1 $(human_exit_code $2)"
    313 			rc_log_message "$msg"
    314 			if ! $rc_silent; then
    315 				printf "%s\n" "$msg"
    316 			fi
    317 		fi
    318 		# After the mountcritlocal script has finished, it's
    319 		# OK to flush the log to disk
    320 		case "$1" in
    321 		*/mountcritlocal)
    322 			rc_log_flush OK
    323 			;;
    324 		esac
    325 		;;
    326 	nop)
    327 		# Do nothing.
    328 		# This has the side effect of flushing partial lines,
    329 		# and the echo() and printf() functions in rc.subr take
    330 		# advantage of this.
    331 		;;
    332 	note)
    333 		# Unlike most metadata messages, which should be used
    334 		# only by /etc/rc and rc.subr, the "note" message may be
    335 		# used directly by /etc.rc.d/* and similar scripts.
    336 		# It adds a note to the log file, without displaying
    337 		# it to stdout.
    338 		rc_log_message "[NOTE: $args]"
    339 		;;
    340 	end)
    341 		# Marks the end of processing, after the last child script.
    342 		# If any child scripts (or other commands) failed, report them.
    343 		#
    344 		if [ -n "$rc_failures" ]; then
    345 			rc_log_message "[failures]"
    346 			msg="The following components reported failures:"
    347 			msg="${msg}${nl}$( echo "    ${rc_failures}" | fmt )"
    348 			msg="${msg}${nl}See ${RC_LOG_FILE} for more information."
    349 			rc_log_message "${msg}"
    350 			printf "%s\n" "${msg}"
    351 		fi
    352 		#
    353 		# Report the end date/time, even in silent mode
    354 		#
    355 		rc_log_message "[$0 finished at $args]"
    356 		printf "%s\n" "$args"
    357 		;;
    358 	exit)
    359 		# Marks an exit from the rc_real_work() function.
    360 		# This may be a normal or abnormal exit.
    361 		#
    362 		rc_log_message "[$0 exiting with status $1]"
    363 		exit $1
    364 		;;
    365 	interrupted)
    366 		# Marks an interrupt trapped by the rc_real_work() function.
    367 		# $args is a human-readable message.
    368 		rc_log_message "$args"
    369 		printf "%s\n" "$args"
    370 		;;
    371 	*)
    372 		# an unrecognised line of metadata
    373 		rc_log_message "[metadata:${metadata}]"
    374 		;;
    375 	esac
    376 }
    377 
    378 #
    379 # rc_log_message string [...]
    380 #	Write a message to the log file, or buffer it for later.
    381 #	This function appends a newline to the message.
    382 #
    383 rc_log_message()
    384 {
    385 	_rc_log_buffer="${_rc_log_buffer}${*}${nl}"
    386 	rc_log_flush
    387 }
    388 
    389 #
    390 # rc_log_message_n string [...]
    391 #	Just like rc_log_message, except without appending a newline.
    392 #
    393 rc_log_message_n()
    394 {
    395 	_rc_log_buffer="${_rc_log_buffer}${*}"
    396 	rc_log_flush
    397 }
    398 
    399 #
    400 # rc_log_flush [OK|FORCE]
    401 #	save outstanding messages from $_rc_log_buffer to $RC_LOG_FILE.
    402 #
    403 # The log file is expected to reside in the /var/run directory, which
    404 # may not be writable very early in the boot sequence, and which is
    405 # erased a little later in the boot sequence.  We therefore avoid
    406 # writing to the file until we believe it's safe to do so.  We also
    407 # assume that it's reasonable to always append to the file, never
    408 # truncating it.
    409 #
    410 # Optional argument $1 may be "OK" to report that writing to the log
    411 # file is expected to be safe from now on, or "FORCE" to force writing
    412 # to the log file even if it may be unsafe.
    413 #
    414 # Returns a non-zero status if messages could not be written to the
    415 # file.
    416 #
    417 rc_log_flush()
    418 {
    419 	#
    420 	# If $_rc_log_flush_ok is false, then it's probably too early to
    421 	# write to the log file, so don't do it, unless $1 is "FORCE".
    422 	#
    423 	: ${_rc_log_flush_ok=false}
    424 	case "$1:$_rc_log_flush_ok" in
    425 	OK:*)
    426 		_rc_log_flush_ok=true
    427 		;;
    428 	FORCE:*)
    429 		: OK just this once
    430 		;;
    431 	*:true)
    432 		: OK
    433 		;;
    434 	*)
    435 		# it's too early in the boot sequence, so don't flush
    436 		return 1
    437 		;;
    438 	esac
    439 
    440 	#
    441 	# Now append the buffer to the file.  The buffer should already
    442 	# contain a trailing newline, so don't add an extra newline.
    443 	#
    444 	if [ -n "$_rc_log_buffer" ]; then
    445 		if { printf "%s" "${_rc_log_buffer}" >>"${RC_LOG_FILE}" ; } \
    446 			2>/dev/null
    447 		then
    448 			_rc_log_buffer=""
    449 		else
    450 			return 1
    451 		fi
    452 	fi
    453 	return 0
    454 }
    455 
    456 #
    457 # Most of the action is in the rc_real_work() and rc_postprocess()
    458 # functions.
    459 #
    460 rc_real_work "$@" 2>&1 | rc_postprocess
    461 exit $?
    462