init - Upstart process management daemon
init [OPTION]...
init is the parent of all processes on the system, it is executed by the kernel and is responsible for starting all other processes; it is the parent of all processes whose natural parents have died and it is responsible for reaping those when they die. Processes managed by init are known as jobs and are defined by files in the /etc/init directory. See init(5) for more details on configuring Upstart. Events init(8) is an event-based init daemon. This means that jobs will be automatically started and stopped by changes that occur to the system state, including as a result of jobs starting and stopping. This is different to dependency-based init daemons which start a specified set of goal jobs, and resolve the order in which they should be started and other jobs required by iterating their dependencies. For more information on starting and stopping jobs, as well as emitting events that will automatically start and stop jobs, see the manual page for the initctl(8) tool. The primary event is the startup(7) event, emitted when the daemon has finished loading its configuration. Other useful events are the starting(7), started(7), stopping(7) and stopped(7) events emitted as jobs change state. Job States Table 1: Job Goals and State Transitions. Goal Current State start stop waiting starting n/a starting pre-start stopping pre-start spawned stopping spawned post-start stopping post-start running stopping running stopping pre-stop / stopping (*) pre-stop running stopping stopping killed killed killed post-stop post-stop post-stop starting waiting Key: (*) If there is a script or exec section and this process is running, state will be 'pre-stop', else it will be 'stopping'. Job Lifecycle Starting a Job 1 Initially the job is "at rest" with a goal of 'stop' and a state of 'waiting' (shown as 'stop/waiting' by the initctl(8) list and status commands). 2 The goal is changed from 'stop' to 'start' indicating the job is attempting to start. 3 The state is changed from 'waiting' to 'starting'. 4 The starting(7) event is emitted denoting the job is "about to start". 5 Any jobs whose 'start on' (or 'stop on') condition would be satisfied by this job starting are started (or stopped respectively). 6 The starting(7) event completes. 7 The state is changed from 'starting' to 'pre-start'. 8 If the pre-start stanza exists, the pre-start process is spawned. 9 If the pre-start process fails, the goal is changed from 'start' to 'stop', and the stopping(7) and stopped(7) events are emitted with appropriate variables set denoting the error. 10 Assuming the pre-start did not fail or did not call "stop", the main process is spawned. 11 The state is changed from 'pre-start' to 'spawned'. 12 Upstart then ascertains the final PID for the job which may be a descendent of the immediate child process if expect fork or expect daemon has been specified. 13 The state is changed from 'spawned' to 'post-start'. 14 If the post-start stanza exists, the post-start process is spawned. 15 The state is changed from 'post-start' to 'running'. 16 The started(7) event is emitted. For services, when this event completes the main process will now be fully running. If the job refers to a task, it will now have completed (successfully or otherwise). 17 Any jobs whose 'start on' (or 'stop on') condition would be satisfied by this job being started are started (or stopped respectively). Stopping a Job 1 Assuming the job is fully running, it will have a goal of 'start' and a state of 'running' (shown as 'start/running' by the initctl(8) list and status commands). 2 The goal is changed from 'start' to 'stop' indicating the job is attempting to stop. 3 The state is changed from 'running' to 'pre-stop'. 4 If the pre-stop stanza exists, the pre-stop process is spawned. 5 The state is changed from 'pre-stop' to 'stopping'. 6 The stopping(7) event is emitted. 7 Any jobs whose 'start on' (or 'stop on') condition would be satisfied by this job stopping are started (or stopped respectively). 8 The main process is stopped: i The signal specified by the kill signal stanza is sent to the process group of the main process (such that all processes belonging to the jobs main process are killed). By default this signal is SIGTERM. See signal(7) and init(5). ii Upstart waits for up to "kill timeout" seconds (default 5 seconds) for the process to end. iii If the process is still running after the timeout, a SIGKILL signal is sent to the process which cannot be ignored and will forcibly stop the processes in the process group. 9 The state is changed from 'killed' to 'post-stop'. 10 If the post-stop stanza exists, the post-stop process is spawned. 11 The state is changed from 'post-stop' to 'waiting'. 12 The stopped(7) event is emitted. When this event completes, the job is fully stopped. 13 Any jobs whose 'start on' (or 'stop on') condition would be satisfied by this job being stopped are started (or stopped respectively). System V compatibility The Upstart init(8) daemon does not keep track of runlevels itself, instead they are implemented entirely by its userspace tools. The event emitted to signify a change of runlevel is the runlevel(7) event. For more information see its manual page.
Options are passed to init(8) by placing them on the kernel command- line. --append-confdir directory Add the specified directory to the default directory or directories that job configuration files will be read from. This option may be specified multiple times which will result in job configuration files being loaded from each directory specified (which must exist). Directories will be searched for jobs in the specified order after the default directories have been searched. Note that if this option is used in combination with --confdir, or --prepend-confdir, regardless of the order of the options on the command-line, the append directories will be added after the other directories. --confdir directory Read job configuration files from a directory other than the default (/etc/init for process ID 1). This option may be specified multiple times which will result in job configuration files being loaded from each directory specified (which must exist). Directories will be searched for jobs in the specified order. In the case that multiple directories specify a job of the same name, the first job encountered will be honoured. See section User Session Mode in init(5) for the ordered list of default configuration directories a Session Init will consider. --default-console value Default value for jobs that do not specify a 'console' stanza. This could be used for example to set the default to 'none' but still honour jobs that specify explicitly 'console log'. See init(5) for all possible values of console. --no-cgroups Do not honour the cgroup stanza. If specified, this stanza will be ignored for any job which specifies it: the job processes will not be placed in the cgroup specified by the stanza and the job itself will not wait until the cgroup manager has started before starting itself. See init(5) for further details. --no-dbus Do not connect to a D-Bus bus. --no-inherit-env Stop jobs from inheriting the initial environment. Only meaningful when running in user mode. --logdir directory Write job output log files to a directory other than /var/log/upstart (system mode) or $XDG_CACHE_HOME/upstart (user session mode). --no-log Disable logging of job output. Note that jobs specifying 'console log' will be treated as if they had specified 'console none'. See init(5) for further details. --no-sessions Disable chroot sessions. --no-startup-event Suppress emission of the initial startup event. This option should only be used for testing since it will stop the init(8) daemon from starting any jobs automatically. --prepend-confdir directory Add the specified directory to the directory or directories that job configuration files will be read from. This option may be specified multiple times which will result in job configuration files being loaded from each directory specified (which must exist). Directories will be searched for jobs in the specified order before the default directories have been searched. Note that if this option is used in combination with --confdir, or --append-confdir, regardless of the order of the options on the command-line, the prepend directories will be added before the other directories. --session Connect to the D-Bus session bus. This should only be used for testing. --startup-event event Specify a different initial startup event from the standard startup(7). --user Starts in user mode, as used for user sessions. Upstart will be run as an unprivileged user, reading configuration files from configuration locations as per roughly XDG Base Directory Specification. See init(5) for further details. -q, --quiet Reduces output messages to errors only. -v, --verbose Outputs verbose messages about job state changes and event emissions to the system console or log, useful for debugging boot. --version Outputs version information and exits.
init is not normally executed by a user process, and expects to have a process id of 1. If this is not the case, it will actually execute telinit(8) and pass all arguments to that. See that manual page for further details. However, if the --user option is specified, it will run as a Session Init and read alternative configuration files and manage the individual user session in a similar fashion. Sending a Session Init a SIGTERM signal is taken as a request to shutdown due to an impending system shutdown. In this scenario, the Session Init will emit the session-end event and request all running jobs stop. It will attempt to honour jobs kill timeout values (see init(5) for further details). Note however that system policy will prevail: if jobs request timeout values longer than the system policy allows for complete system shutdown, it will not be possible to honour them before the Session Init is killed by the system.
When run as a user process, the following variables may be used to find job configuration files: * $XDG_CONFIG_HOME * $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS See User Session Mode in init(5) for further details.
/etc/init.conf /etc/init/ $HOME/.init/ $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/upstart/ $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/upstart/
Written by Scott James Remnant <scott@netsplit.com>
Report bugs at <https://launchpad.net/upstart/+bugs>
Copyright 2009-2013 Canonical Ltd. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
all-swaps(7), control-alt-delete(7), dbus-daemon(1), dbus-event(7), dconf-event(7), file-event(7), filesystem(7), init(5), init(8), initctl(8), keyboard-request(7), local-filesystems(7), mountall(8), mounted(7), mounting(7), power-status-changed(7), remote-filesystems(7), runlevel(7), shutdown(8), socket-event(7), started(7), starting(7), startup(7), stopped(7), stopping(7), telinit(8), upstart-dbus-bridge(8), upstart-dconf-bridge(8), upstart-event-bridge(8), upstart-events(7), upstart-file-bridge(8), upstart-local-bridge(8), upstart-socket-bridge(8), upstart-udev-bridge(8), virtual-filesystems(7).
Personal Opportunity - Free software gives you access to billions of dollars of software at no cost. Use this software for your business, personal use or to develop a profitable skill. Access to source code provides access to a level of capabilities/information that companies protect though copyrights. Open source is a core component of the Internet and it is available to you. Leverage the billions of dollars in resources and capabilities to build a career, establish a business or change the world. The potential is endless for those who understand the opportunity.
Business Opportunity - Goldman Sachs, IBM and countless large corporations are leveraging open source to reduce costs, develop products and increase their bottom lines. Learn what these companies know about open source and how open source can give you the advantage.
Free Software provides computer programs and capabilities at no cost but more importantly, it provides the freedom to run, edit, contribute to, and share the software. The importance of free software is a matter of access, not price. Software at no cost is a benefit but ownership rights to the software and source code is far more significant.
Free Office Software - The Libre Office suite provides top desktop productivity tools for free. This includes, a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation engine, drawing and flowcharting, database and math applications. Libre Office is available for Linux or Windows.
The Free Books Library is a collection of thousands of the most popular public domain books in an online readable format. The collection includes great classical literature and more recent works where the U.S. copyright has expired. These books are yours to read and use without restrictions.
Source Code - Want to change a program or know how it works? Open Source provides the source code for its programs so that anyone can use, modify or learn how to write those programs themselves. Visit the GNU source code repositories to download the source.
Study at Harvard, Stanford or MIT - Open edX provides free online courses from Harvard, MIT, Columbia, UC Berkeley and other top Universities. Hundreds of courses for almost all major subjects and course levels. Open edx also offers some paid courses and selected certifications.
Linux Manual Pages - A man or manual page is a form of software documentation found on Linux/Unix operating systems. Topics covered include computer programs (including library and system calls), formal standards and conventions, and even abstract concepts.