Hitchhiker's Guide to Openbsd
- How do I duplicate a filesystem?
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- How does rc(8) work
10.2 - How do I duplicate a filesystem?
To duplicate your filesystem use dump(8) and restore(8) . For example, to duplicate everything under directory SRC to directory DST , do a: # cd /SRC; dump 0f - . | (cd /DST; restore -rf - ) dump is designed to give you plenty of backup capabilities, and it may be an overkill if you just want to duplicate a part of a (or an entire) filesystem. The command tar(1) may be faster for this operation. The format looks very similar: # cd /SRC; tar cf - . | (cd /DST; tar xpf - ) 10.3 - How do I start daemons with the system? (Overview of rc (8)) OpenBSD itself uses an rc(8) style startup. This uses a few key files for startup. ● /etc/rc - Main script. Should not be edited. ● /etc/rc.conf - Configuration file used by /etc/rc to set startup parameters for the system. Should not be edited. ● /etc/rc.conf.local - Configuration file that overrides settings in /etc/rc.conf so you don't have to touch /etc/rc.conf itself, which is important when upgrading your system. ● /etc/netstart - Script used to initialize the network. Shouldn't be edited. ● /etc/rc.local - Script used for local administration. This is where new daemons or host specific http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html (2 of 32)9/4/2011 10:02:15 AM 10 - System Management information should be stored. ● /etc/rc.securelevel - Script which runs commands that must be run before the security level changes. See init(8) ● /etc/rc.shutdown - Script run on shutdown. Put anything you want done before shutdown in this file. See rc.shutdown(8) How does rc(8) work? The main files a system administrator should concentrate on are /etc/rc.conf (for guidance), /etc/rc.conf. local (for changes), /etc/rc.local and /etc/rc.shutdown. To get a look of how the rc(8) procedure works, here is the flow: After the kernel is booted, /etc/rc is started: ● Filesystems are checked. ● Default configuration variables are read in from /etc/rc.conf, then local changes to those variables are read from /etc/rc.conf.local. Settings in rc.conf.local will override those in rc.conf. ● Filesystems are mounted ● Clears out /tmp and preserves any editor files ● Configures the network via /etc/netstart ❍ Configures your interfaces up. ❍ Sets your hostname, domainname, etc. ● Starts system daemons ● Performs various other checks (quotas, savecore, etc) ● Runs /etc/rc.firsttime ● Runs /etc/rc.local ● Processes the scripts in /etc/rc.d Download 1.27 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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