From 92cfa0e543d380ab290d06e98e2fef1b283349fe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: William Hubbs Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2018 15:33:03 -0600 Subject: service-script-guide.md: formatting changes Add a title, adjust the headings and update the example that referred to "net.lo" to refer to "loopback". --- service-script-guide.md | 28 +++++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/service-script-guide.md b/service-script-guide.md index 5806b808..668d05d4 100644 --- a/service-script-guide.md +++ b/service-script-guide.md @@ -1,4 +1,6 @@ -This document is aimed at upstream and distribution developers who +# OpenRC Service Script Writing Guide + +This document is aimed at developers or packagers who write OpenRC service scripts, either for their own projects, or for the packages they maintain. It contains advice, suggestions, tips, tricks, hints, and counsel; cautions, warnings, heads-ups, @@ -11,7 +13,7 @@ don't consider anything exotic, and assume that you will use start-stop-daemon to manage a fairly typical long-running UNIX process. -# Don't write your own start/stop functions +## Don't write your own start/stop functions OpenRC is capable of stopping and starting most daemons based on the information that you give it. For a well-behaved daemon that @@ -113,7 +115,7 @@ To recap, in order of preference: to disable the daemon's PID file (or, to write it straight into the garbage), then do that, and use `command_background=true`. -# Reloading your daemon's configuration +## Reloading your daemon's configuration Many daemons will reload their configuration files in response to a signal. Suppose your daemon will reload its configuration in response @@ -139,7 +141,7 @@ reload() { } ``` -# Don't restart/reload with a broken config +## Don't restart/reload with a broken config Often, users will start a daemon, make some configuration change, and then attempt to restart the daemon. If the recent configuration change @@ -187,7 +189,7 @@ reload() { } ``` -# PID files should be writable only by root +## PID files should be writable only by root PID files must be writable only by *root*, which means additionally that they must live in a *root*-owned directory. @@ -239,7 +241,7 @@ A decent example of this is the [Nagios core service script](https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/blob/master/openrc-init.in), where the full path to the PID file is specified at build-time. -# Don't let the user control the PID file location +## Don't let the user control the PID file location It's usually a mistake to let the end user control the PID file location through a conf.d variable, for a few reasons: @@ -267,7 +269,7 @@ pidfile="/run/${RC_SVCNAME}.pid" guarantees that your PID file has a unique name. -# Upstream your service scripts (for distribution developers) +## Upstream your service scripts (for packagers) The ideal place for an OpenRC service script is **upstream**. Much like systemd services, a well-crafted OpenRC service script should be @@ -292,7 +294,7 @@ service script in your own distribution's repository, then you have to keep the command path and package synchronized yourself, and that's no fun. -# Be wary of "need net" dependencies +## Be wary of "need net" dependencies There are two things you need to know about "need net" dependencies: @@ -310,7 +312,7 @@ interface. We'll consider the two most common users of "need net"; network clients who access some network resource, and network servers who provide them. -## Network clients +### Network clients Network clients typically want the WAN interface to be up. That may tempt you to depend on the WAN interface; but first, you should ask @@ -329,7 +331,7 @@ logged. The signature update service will not crash, and—perhaps more importantly—you don't want it to terminate if the administrator turns off the WAN interface for a second. -## Network servers +### Network servers Network servers are generally easier to handle than their client counterparts. Most server daemons listen on `0.0.0.0` (all addresses) @@ -350,7 +352,7 @@ If your daemon can optionally be configured to listen on a particular interface, then please see the "Depending on a particular interface" section. -## Depending on a particular interface +### Depending on a particular interface If you need to depend on one particular interface, usually it's not easy to determine programmatically what that interface is. For @@ -371,8 +373,8 @@ like the following in the service configuration file, ```sh # Specify the network service that corresponds to the "bind" setting # in your configuration file. For example, if you bind to 127.0.0.1, -# this should be set to "net.lo" which provides the loopback interface. -rc_need="net.lo" +# this should be set to "loopback" which provides the loopback interface. +rc_need="loopback" ``` This is a sensible default for daemons that are happy with `0.0.0.0`, -- cgit v1.2.3