| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479480481482483484485486487488489490491492493494495496497498499500501502503504505 | <sect1 id="ch07-functions"><title>Creating the functions script</title><para>Create the <filename>/etc/init.d/functions</filename> script by runningthe following command:</para><para><screen><userinput>cat > /etc/init.d/functions << "EOF"</userinput>#!/bin/sh# Begin /etc/init.d/functions## Set a few variables that influence the text that's printed on the# screen. The SET_COL variable starts the text in the column number # decided by the COL and WCOL section (as defined by the COL # variable). NORMAL prints text in normal mode.# SUCCESS prints text in a green colour and FAILURE prints text in a red# colour## If COLUMNS hasn't been set yet (bash sets it but not when called as# sh), do it ourself	if [ -z "$COLUMNS" ]    	then        	# Get the console device if we don't have it already		# This is ok by the FHS as there is a fallback if		# /usr/bin/tty isn't available, for example at bootup.        	test -x /usr/bin/tty && CONSOLE=`/usr/bin/tty`        	test -z "$CONSOLE" && CONSOLE=/dev/console    		# Get the console size (rows columns)        	SIZE=$(stty size < $CONSOLE)     		# Strip off the rows leaving the columns      		COLUMNS=${SIZE#*\ }	fi COL=$[$COLUMNS - 10]WCOL=$[$COLUMNS - 30]SET_COL="echo -en \\033[${COL}G"SET_WCOL="echo -en \\033[${WCOL}G"NORMAL="echo -en \\033[0;39m"SUCCESS="echo -en \\033[1;32m"WARNING="echo -en \\033[1;33m"FAILURE="echo -en \\033[1;31m"## The evaluate_retval function evaluates the return value of the process# that was run just before this function was called. If the return value# was 0, indicating success, the print_status function is called with# the 'success' parameter. Otherwise the print_status function is called# with the failure parameter.#evaluate_retval(){        if [ $? = 0 ]        then                print_status success        else                print_status failure        fi}## The print_status prints [  OK  ] or [FAILED] to the screen. OK appears# in the colour defined by the SUCCESS variable and FAILED appears in# the colour defined by the FAILURE variable. Both are printed starting# in the column defined by the COL variable.#print_status(){## If no parameters are given to the print_status function, print usage# information.#        if [ $# = 0 ]        then                echo "Usage: print_status {success|failure}"                return 1        fi        case "$1" in                success)                        $SET_COL                        echo -n "[  "                        $SUCCESS                        echo -n "OK"                        $NORMAL                        echo "  ]"                        ;;                warning)                        $SET_COL                        echo -n "[ "                        $WARNING                        echo -n "ATTN"                        $NORMAL                        echo " ]"                        ;;                failure)                        $SET_COL                        echo -n "["                        $FAILURE                        echo -n "FAILED"                        $NORMAL                        echo "]"                        ;;        esac}## The loadproc function starts a process (often a daemon) with# proper error checking#loadproc(){## If no parameters are given to the print_status function, print usage# information.#        if [ $# = 0 ]        then                echo "Usage: loadproc {program}"                exit 1        fi## Find the basename of the first parameter (the daemon's name without# the path# that was provided so /usr/sbin/syslogd becomes plain 'syslogd' after# basename ran)#        base=$(/usr/bin/basename $1)## the pidlist variable will contains the output of the pidof command.# pidof will try to find the PID's that belong to a certain string;# $base in this case#        pidlist=$(/bin/pidof -o $$ -o $PPID -o %PPID -x $base)        pid=""        for apid in $pidlist        do                if [ -d /proc/$apid ]                then                        pid="$pid $apid"                fi        done## If the $pid variable contains anything (from the previous for loop) it# means the daemon is already running#        if [ ! -n "$pid" ]        then## Empty $pid variable means it's not running, so we run "$@" (all# parameters giving to this function from the script) and then check the# return value#                "$@"                evaluate_retval        else## The variable $pid was not empty, meaning it was already running. We'll# print [ ATTN ] now#                $SET_WCOL                echo -n "Already running"                print_status warning        fi}## The killproc function kills a process with proper error checking#killproc(){## If no parameters are given to the print_status function, print usage# information.#        if [ $# = 0 ]        then                echo "Usage: killproc {program} [signal]"                exit 1        fi## Find the basename of the first parameter (the daemon's name without# the path# that was provided so /usr/sbin/syslogd becomes plain 'syslogd' after# basename ran)#        base=$(/usr/bin/basename $1)## Check if we gave a signal to kill the process with (like -HUP, -TERM,# -KILL, etc) to this function (the second parameter). If no second# parameter was provided set the nolevel variable. Else set the# killlevel variable to the value of $2 (the second parameter)#        if [ "$2" != "" ]        then                killlevel=-$2        else                nolevel=1        fi## the pidlist variable will contains the output of the pidof command.# pidof will try to find the PID's that belong to a certain string;# $base in this case#        pidlist=$(/bin/pidof -o $$ -o $PPID -o %PPID -x $base)        pid=""        for apid in $pidlist        do                if [ -d /proc/$apid ]                then                        pid="$pid $apid"                fi        done## If $pid contains something from the previous for loop it means one or# more PID's were found that belongs to the processes to be killed#        if [ -n "$pid" ]        then## If no kill level was specified we'll try -TERM first and then sleep# for 2 seconds to allow the kill to be completed#                if [ "$nolevel" = 1 ]                then                        /bin/kill -TERM $pid## If after -TERM the PID still exists we'll wait 2 seconds before# trying to kill it with -KILL. If the PID still exist after that, wait# two more seconds. If the PIDs still exist by then it's safe to assume# that we cannot kill these PIDs.#                        if /bin/ps h $pid >/dev/null 2>&1                        then                                /usr/bin/sleep 2                                if /bin/ps h $pid > /dev/null 2>&1                                then                                        /bin/kill -KILL $pid                                        if /bin/ps h $pid > /dev/null 2>&1                                        then                                                /usr/bin/sleep 2                                        fi                                fi                        fi                        /bin/ps h $pid >/dev/null 2>&1                        if [ $? = 0 ]                        then## If after the -KILL it still exists it can't be killed for some reason# and we'll print [FAILED]#                                print_status failure                        else## It was killed, remove possible stale PID file in /var/run and # print [  OK  ]#                                /bin/rm -f /var/run/$base.pid                                print_status success                        fi                else## A kill level was provided. Kill with the provided kill level and wait# for 2 seconds to allow the kill to be completed#                        /bin/kill $killlevel $pid                        if /bin/ps h $pid > /dev/null 2>&1                        then                                /usr/bin/sleep 2                        fi                        /bin/ps h $pid >/dev/null 2>&1                        if [ $? = 0 ]                        then## If ps' return value is 0 it means it ran ok which indicates that the# PID still exists. This means the process wasn't killed properly with# the signal provided. Print [FAILED]#                                print_status failure                        else## If the return value was 1 or higher it means the PID didn't exist# anymore which means it was killed successfully. Remove possible stale# PID file and print [  OK  ]#                                /bin/rm -f /var/run/$base.pid                                print_status success                        fi                fi        else## The PID didn't exist so we can't attempt to kill it. Print [ ATTN ]#                $SET_WCOL                echo -n "Not running"                print_status warning        fi}## The reloadproc functions sends a signal to a daemon telling it to# reload it's configuration file. This is almost identical to the# killproc function with the exception that it won't try to kill it with# a -KILL signal (aka -9)#reloadproc(){## If no parameters are given to the print_status function, print usage# information.#        if [ $# = 0 ]        then                echo "Usage: reloadproc {program} [signal]"                exit 1        fi## Find the basename of the first parameter (the daemon's name without# the path that was provided so /usr/sbin/syslogd becomes plain 'syslogd' # after basename ran)#        base=$(/usr/bin/basename $1)## Check if we gave a signal to send to the process (like -HUP)# to this function (the second parameter). If no second# parameter was provided set the nolevel variable. Else set the# killlevel variable to the value of $2 (the second parameter)#        if [ -n "$2" ]        then                killlevel=-$2        else                nolevel=1        fi## the pidlist variable will contains the output of the pidof command.# pidof will try to find the PID's that belong to a certain string;# $base in this case#        pidlist=$(/bin/pidof -o $$ -o $PPID -o %PPID -x $base)        pid=""        for apid in $pidlist        do                if [ -d /proc/$apid ]                then                        pid="$pid $apid"                fi        done## If $pid contains something from the previous for loop it means one or# more PID's were found that belongs to the processes to be reloaded#        if [ -n "$pid" ]        then## If nolevel was set we will use the default reload signal SIGHUP.#                if [ "$nolevel" = 1 ]                then                        /bin/kill -SIGHUP $pid                        evaluate_retval                else## Else we will use the provided signal#                        /bin/kill $killlevel $pid                        evaluate_retval                fi        else## If $pid is empty no PID's have been found that belong to the process.# Print [ ATTN ]#                $SET_WCOL                echo -n "Not running"                print_status warning        fi}## The statusproc function will try to find out if a process is running# or not#statusproc(){## If no parameters are given to the print_status function, print usage# information.#        if [ $# = 0 ]        then                echo "Usage: status {program}"                return 1        fi## $pid will contain a list of PID's that belong to a process#        pid=$(/bin/pidof -o $$ -o $PPID -o %PPID -x $1)        if [ -n "$pid" ]        then## If $pid contains something, the process is running, print the contents# of the $pid variable#                echo "$1 running with Process ID $pid"                return 0        fi## If $pid doesn't contain it check if a PID file exists and inform the# user about this stale file.#        if [ -f /var/run/$1.pid ]        then                pid=$(/usr/bin/head -1 /var/run/$1.pid)                if [ -n "$pid" ]                then                        echo "$1 not running but /var/run/$1.pid exists"                        return 1                fi        else                echo "$1 is not running"        fi}# End /etc/init.d/functions<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen></para></sect1>
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