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Diffstat (limited to 'extra/openrc')
-rw-r--r-- | extra/openrc/rc.conf | 313 |
1 files changed, 313 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/extra/openrc/rc.conf b/extra/openrc/rc.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fdeb653 --- /dev/null +++ b/extra/openrc/rc.conf @@ -0,0 +1,313 @@ +# Global OpenRC configuration settings + +# Set to "YES" if you want the rc system to try and start services +# in parallel for a slight speed improvement. When running in parallel we +# prefix the service output with its name as the output will get +# jumbled up. +# WARNING: whilst we have improved parallel, it can still potentially lock +# the boot process. Don't file bugs about this unless you can supply +# patches that fix it without breaking other things! +rc_parallel="YES" + +# Set rc_interactive to "YES" and you'll be able to press the I key during +# boot so you can choose to start specific services. Set to "NO" to disable +# this feature. This feature is automatically disabled if rc_parallel is +# set to YES. +#rc_interactive="YES" + +# If we need to drop to a shell, you can specify it here. +# If not specified we use $SHELL, otherwise the one specified in /etc/passwd, +# otherwise /bin/sh +# Linux users could specify /sbin/sulogin +rc_shell=/bin/sh + +# Do we allow any started service in the runlevel to satisfy the dependency +# or do we want all of them regardless of state? For example, if net.eth0 +# and net.eth1 are in the default runlevel then with rc_depend_strict="NO" +# both will be started, but services that depend on 'net' will work if either +# one comes up. With rc_depend_strict="YES" we would require them both to +# come up. +#rc_depend_strict="YES" + +# rc_hotplug controls which services we allow to be hotplugged. +# A hotplugged service is one started by a dynamic dev manager when a matching +# hardware device is found. +# Hotplugged services appear in the "hotplugged" runlevel. +# If rc_hotplug is set to any value, we compare the name of this service +# to every pattern in the value, from left to right, and we allow the +# service to be hotplugged if it matches a pattern, or if it matches no +# patterns. Patterns can include shell wildcards. +# To disable services from being hotplugged, prefix patterns with "!". +#If rc_hotplug is not set or is empty, all hotplugging is disabled. +# Example - rc_hotplug="net.wlan !net.*" +# This allows net.wlan and any service not matching net.* to be hotplugged. +# Example - rc_hotplug="!net.*" +# This allows services that do not match "net.*" to be hotplugged. + +# rc_logger launches a logging daemon to log the entire rc process to +# /var/log/rc.log +# NOTE: Linux systems require the devfs service to be started before +# logging can take place and as such cannot log the sysinit runlevel. +#rc_logger="NO" + +# Through rc_log_path you can specify a custom log file. +# The default value is: /var/log/rc.log +#rc_log_path="/var/log/rc.log" + +# If you want verbose output for OpenRC, set this to yes. If you want +# verbose output for service foo only, set it to yes in /etc/conf.d/foo. +#rc_verbose=no + +# By default we filter the environment for our running scripts. To allow other +# variables through, add them here. Use a * to allow all variables through. +#rc_env_allow="VAR1 VAR2" + +# By default we assume that all daemons will start correctly. +# However, some do not - a classic example is that they fork and return 0 AND +# then child barfs on a configuration error. Or the daemon has a bug and the +# child crashes. You can set the number of milliseconds start-stop-daemon +# waits to check that the daemon is still running after starting here. +# The default is 0 - no checking. +#rc_start_wait=100 + +# rc_nostop is a list of services which will not stop when changing runlevels. +# This still allows the service itself to be stopped when called directly. +#rc_nostop="" + +# rc will attempt to start crashed services by default. +# However, it will not stop them by default as that could bring down other +# critical services. +#rc_crashed_stop=NO +#rc_crashed_start=YES + +# Set rc_nocolor to yes if you do not want colors displayed in OpenRC +# output. +#rc_nocolor=NO + +############################################################################## +# MISC CONFIGURATION VARIABLES +# There variables are shared between many init scripts + +# Set unicode to YES to turn on unicode support for keyboards and screens. +unicode="YES" + +# This is how long fuser should wait for a remote server to respond. The +# default is 60 seconds, but it can be adjusted here. +#rc_fuser_timeout=60 + +# Below is the default list of network fstypes. +# +# afs ceph cifs coda davfs fuse fuse.sshfs gfs glusterfs lustre ncpfs +# nfs nfs4 ocfs2 shfs smbfs +# +# If you would like to add to this list, you can do so by adding your +# own fstypes to the following variable. +#extra_net_fs_list="" + +############################################################################## +# SERVICE CONFIGURATION VARIABLES +# These variables are documented here, but should be configured in +# /etc/conf.d/foo for service foo and NOT enabled here unless you +# really want them to work on a global basis. +# If your service has characters in its name which are not legal in +# shell variable names and you configure the variables for it in this +# file, those characters should be replaced with underscores in the +# variable names as shown below. + +# Some daemons are started and stopped via start-stop-daemon. +# We can set some things on a per service basis, like the nicelevel. +#SSD_NICELEVEL="-19" +# Or the ionice level. The format is class[:data] , just like the +# --ionice start-stop-daemon parameter. +#SSD_IONICELEVEL="2:2" + +# Pass ulimit parameters +# If you are using bash in POSIX mode for your shell, note that the +# ulimit command uses a block size of 512 bytes for the -c and -f +# options +#rc_ulimit="-u 30" + +# It's possible to define extra dependencies for services like so +#rc_config="/etc/foo" +#rc_need="openvpn" +#rc_use="net.eth0" +#rc_after="clock" +#rc_before="local" +#rc_provide="!net" + +# You can also enable the above commands here for each service. Below is an +# example for service foo. +#rc_foo_config="/etc/foo" +#rc_foo_need="openvpn" +#rc_foo_after="clock" + +# Below is an example for service foo-bar. Note that the '-' is illegal +# in a shell variable name, so we convert it to an underscore. +# example for service foo-bar. +#rc_foo_bar_config="/etc/foo-bar" +#rc_foo_bar_need="openvpn" +#rc_foo_bar_after="clock" + +# You can also remove dependencies. +# This is mainly used for saying which services do NOT provide net. +#rc_net_tap0_provide="!net" + +# This is the subsystem type. +# It is used to match against keywords set by the keyword call in the +# depend function of service scripts. +# +# It should be set to the value representing the environment this file is +# PRESENTLY in, not the virtualization the environment is capable of. +# If it is commented out, automatic detection will be used. +# +# The list below shows all possible settings as well as the host +# operating systems where they can be used and autodetected. +# +# "" - nothing special +# "docker" - Docker container manager (Linux) +# "jail" - Jail (DragonflyBSD or FreeBSD) +# "lxc" - Linux Containers +# "openvz" - Linux OpenVZ +# "prefix" - Prefix +# "rkt" - CoreOS container management system (Linux) +# "subhurd" - Hurd subhurds (to be checked) +# "systemd-nspawn" - Container created by systemd-nspawn (Linux) +# "uml" - Usermode Linux +# "vserver" - Linux vserver +# "xen0" - Xen0 Domain (Linux and NetBSD) +# "xenU" - XenU Domain (Linux and NetBSD) +#rc_sys="" + +# if you use openrc-init, which is currently only available on Linux, +# this is the default runlevel to activate after "sysinit" and "boot" +# when booting. +#rc_default_runlevel="default" + +# on Linux and Hurd, this is the number of ttys allocated for logins +# It is used in the consolefont, keymaps, numlock and termencoding +# service scripts. +rc_tty_number=12 + +############################################################################## +# LINUX CGROUPS RESOURCE MANAGEMENT + +# This sets the mode used to mount cgroups. +# "hybrid" mounts cgroups version 2 on /sys/fs/cgroup/unified and +# cgroups version 1 on /sys/fs/cgroup. +# "legacy" mounts cgroups version 1 on /sys/fs/cgroup +# "unified" mounts cgroups version 2 on /sys/fs/cgroup +#rc_cgroup_mode="hybrid" + +# This is a list of controllers which should be enabled for cgroups version 2 +# when hybrid mode is being used. +# Controllers listed here will not be available for cgroups version 1. +#rc_cgroup_controllers="" + +# This variable contains the cgroups version 2 settings for your services. +# If this is set in this file, the settings will apply to all services. +# If you want different settings for each service, place the settings in +# /etc/conf.d/foo for service foo. +# The format is to specify the setting and value followed by a newline. +# Multiple settings and values can be specified. +# For example, you would use this to set the maximum memory and maximum +# number of pids for a service. +#rc_cgroup_settings=" +#memory.max 10485760 +#pids.max max +#" +# +# For more information about the adjustments that can be made with +# cgroups version 2, see Documentation/cgroups-v2.txt in the linux kernel +# source tree. +#rc_cgroup_settings="" + +# This switch controls whether or not cgroups version 1 controllers are +# individually mounted under +# /sys/fs/cgroup in hybrid or legacy mode. +#rc_controller_cgroups="YES" + +# The following setting turns on the memory.use_hierarchy setting in the +# root memory cgroup for cgroups v1. +# It must be set to yes in this file if you want this functionality. +#rc_cgroup_memory_use_hierarchy="NO" + +# The following settings allow you to set up values for the cgroups version 1 +# controllers for your services. +# They can be set in this file;, however, if you do this, the settings +# will apply to all of your services. +# If you want different settings for each service, place the settings in +# /etc/conf.d/foo for service foo. +# The format is to specify the names of the settings followed by their +# values. Each variable can hold multiple settings. +# For example, you would use this to set the cpu.shares setting in the +# cpu controller to 512 for your service. +# rc_cgroup_cpu=" +# cpu.shares 512 +# " +# +# For more information about the adjustments that can be made with +# cgroups version 1, see Documentation/cgroups-v1/* in the linux kernel +# source tree. + +# Set the blkio controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_blkio="" + +# Set the cpu controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_cpu="" + +# Add this service to the cpuacct controller (any value means yes). +#rc_cgroup_cpuacct="" + +# Set the cpuset controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_cpuset="" + +# Set the devices controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_devices="" + +# Set the hugetlb controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_hugetlb="" + +# Set the memory controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_memory="" + +# Set the net_cls controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_net_cls="" + +# Set the net_prio controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_net_prio="" + +# Set the pids controller settings for this service. +#rc_cgroup_pids="" + +# Set this to YES if you want all of the processes in a service's cgroup +# killed when the service is stopped or restarted. +# Be aware that setting this to yes means all of a service's +# child processes will be killed. Keep this in mind if you set this to +# yes here instead of for the individual services in +# /etc/conf.d/<service>. +# To perform this cleanup manually for a stopped service, you can +# execute cgroup_cleanup with /etc/init.d/<service> cgroup_cleanup or +# rc-service <service> cgroup_cleanup. +# The process followed in this cleanup is the following: +# 1. send stopsig (sigterm if it isn't set) to all processes left in the +# cgroup immediately followed by sigcont. +# 2. Send sighup to all processes in the cgroup if rc_send_sighup is +# yes. +# 3. delay for rc_timeout_stopsec seconds. +# 4. send sigkill to all processes in the cgroup unless disabled by +# setting rc_send_sigkill to no. +# rc_cgroup_cleanup="NO" + +# If this is yes, we will send sighup to the processes in the cgroup +# immediately after stopsig and sigcont. +#rc_send_sighup="NO" + +# This is the amount of time in seconds that we delay after sending sigcont +# and optionally sighup, before we optionally send sigkill to all +# processes in the # cgroup. +# The default is 90 seconds. +#rc_timeout_stopsec="90" + +# If this is set to no, we do not send sigkill to all processes in the +# cgroup. +#rc_send_sigkill="YES" |