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INITCTL(8) System Manager’s Manual INITCTL(8)

NAME

initctl — Control tool for Finit

SYNOPSIS

/sbin/initctl [-bcfhjlpqtvV] [COMMAND]

DESCRIPTION

initctl is the official tool for interacting with finit(8). It comes with functions for showing status, querying health of services, as well as editing, enabling and disabling services.

OPTIONS

This program follows the usual UNIX command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (’-’). The options are as follows:

-b, --batch

Batch mode, no screen size probing. Useful for scripting.

-c, --create

Create missing paths (and files) as needed. Useful with the edit command.

-f, --force

Ignore missing files and arguments, never prompt.

-h, --help

Show built-in help text.

-j, --json

JSON output in status and cond commands.

-n, --noerr

When scripting initctl to stop, start, restart, or signal a task or service, this option can be used to ignore error 69 (no such task or service) and instead return 0 (OK).

-1, --once

Only one lap in commands like top.

-p, --plain

Use plain table headings, no ANSI control characters.

-q, --quiet

Silent, only return status of command.

-t, --no-heading

Skip table headings.

-v, --verbose

Verbose output, where applicable.

-V, --version

Show program version.

COMMANDS
initctl
debug

Toggle finit (daemon) debug to /dev/console

initctl help

Show built-in help text.

initctl version

Show program version.

initctl ls | list

List all *.conf files in /etc/finit.d

initctl create CONF

Create .conf in /etc/finit.d/available.

Piping the contents into initctl works as one would expect:

echo "task name:foo /tmp/foo.sh -- Foo logger" | initctl create foo
initctl enable foo
initctl reload

initctl delete CONF

Delete .conf in /etc/finit.d/available

initctl show CONF

Show .conf in /etc/finit.d/available

initctl edit CONF

Edit .conf in /etc/finit.d/available

initctl touch CONF

Change (mark as modified) .conf in /etc/finit.d/available, like edit this tells finit that a configuration has been changed and is a candidate to be restarted (or SIGHUP’ed) on initctl reload

initctl enable CONF

Enable .conf in /etc/finit.d/available, i.e., add symlink in /etc/finit.d/enabled

initctl disable CONF

Disable .conf in /etc/finit.d/enabled, i.e., removes symlink.

initctl reload

Reload *.conf in /etc/finit.d, i.e., activates changes.

initctl cond set COND [COND ...]

Set (assert) user-defined condition, +usr/COND

initctl cond get COND

Get (quietly) the status of any condition. Defaults to user-defined condions, but if a slash is detected, e.g., pid/foo or net/eth0/exist, then any condition can be read.

The command is geared for scripting, check the exit code to get the status of the condition: 0 - on, 1 - off, 255 - flux. For a more verbose output, use the -v option.

initctl cond clr | clear COND [COND ...]

Clear (deassert) user-defined condition, -usr/COND

initctl cond status

Show condition status, default cond command. Also supports the -j option for detailed JSON output.

initctl cond dump [TYPE]

Dump all, or a given type of, conditions and their status. Also supports the -j option for detailed JSON output.

initctl ident [NAME]

Display indentities of all run/task/services, or only instances matching NAME. A partial string, e.g., NAM, will not match anything.

initctl log [NAME]

Show ten last Finit, or NAME, messages from syslog.

initctl start NAME[:ID]

Start service by name, with optional ID, e.g., initctl start tty:1

initctl stop NAME[:ID]

Stop/Pause a running service by name.

initctl reload NAME[:ID]

Reload service as if its configuration had changed. Internally, finit marks the named service as "dirty" and turns the state machine, resulting in a SIGHUP or restart of (at least) the named service. Any dependant services are also restarted.

Note: no .conf file is reloaded with this variant of the command. Essentially it is the same as calling restart. Except for two things:

1.

if the service supports HUP, it’s signaled instead of stop-started, and

2.

it allows restarting run/task in the same runlevel -- which is otherwise restricted.

initctl signal NAME:[ID] S

Send signal S to service, by name. S may be a complete signal name such as SIGHUP, or short name such as HUP, or the signal number such as 1 (SIGHUP).

initctl restart NAME[:ID]

Restart (stop/start) service by name.

initctl status NAME[:ID]

Show service status, by name. If only NAME is given and multiple instances exits, a summary of all matching instances are shown. Only an exact match displays detailed status for a given instance.

With the -q option this command is silent, provided the NAME[:ID] selection matches a single run/task/service. The exit code of initctl is non-zero if there is a problem. Zero is returned if a run/task has run (at least) once in the current runlevel, and when a service is running (as expected). See the -j option for detailed JSON output suitable for machine parsing.

Tip: jq(1) is a useful scripting tool in combination with JSON output.

initctl status

Show status of all services, default command. Also supports the -j option for detailed JSON output.

initctl cgroup

List cgroup config overview.

initctl ps

List processes based on cgroups.

initctl top

Show top-like listing based on cgroups.

initctl plugins

List installed plugins.

initctl runlevel [0-9]

Show or set runlevel: 0 halt, 6 reboot.

If called at boot (runlevel S) to set the runlevel, Finit only schedules the change, effectively overriding the configured runlevel from /etc/finit.conf. Useful to trigger a fail-safe mode, or similar.

initctl reboot

Reboot system, default if reboot is symlinked to initctl.

initctl halt

Halt system, default if halt is symlinked to initctl.

initctl poweroff

Power-off system, default if poweroff is symlinked to initctl.

initctl suspend

Suspend system, default if suspend is symlinked to initctl.

initctl utmp show

Raw dump of UTMP/WTMP db.

SEE ALSO

finit.conf(5) finit(8)

AUTHORS

finit was conceived and reverse engineered by Claudio Matsuoka. Since v1.0, maintained by Joachim Wiberg, with contributions by many others.

Linux June 6, 2021 Linux