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RC.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual RC.CONF(5)

NAME

rc.conf — system configuration information

DESCRIPTION

The file rc.conf contains descriptive information about the local host name, configuration details for any potential network interfaces and which services should be started up at system initial boot time. In new installations, the rc.conf file is generally initialized by the system installation utility, sysinstall(8).

The purpose of rc.conf is not to run commands or perform system startup actions directly. Instead, it is included by the various generic startup scripts in /etc which conditionalize their internal actions according to the settings found there.

The /etc/rc.conf file is included from the file /etc/defaults/rc.conf, which specifies the default settings for all the available options. Options need only be specified in /etc/rc.conf when the system administrator wishes to override these defaults. The file /etc/rc.conf.local is used to override settings in /etc/rc.conf for historical reasons. See the rc_conf_files variable below.

The following list provides a name and short description for each variable that can be set in the rc.conf file:

rc_debug

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable output of debug messages from rc scripts. This variable can be helpful in diagnosing mistakes when editing or integrating new scripts. Beware that this produces copious output to the terminal and syslog(3).

rc_info

(bool) If set to ’’NO’’, disable informational messages from the rc scripts. Informational messages are displayed when a condition that is not serious enough to warrant a warning or an error occurs.

swapfile

(str) If set to ’’NO’’, no swapfile is installed, otherwise the value is used as the full pathname to a file to use for additional swap space.

apm_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable support for Automatic Power Management with the apm(8) command.

apmd_enable

(bool) Run apmd(8) to handle APM event from userland. This also enables support for APM.

apmd_flags

(str) If apmd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the apmd(8) daemon.

devd_enable

(bool) Run devd(8) to handle device added, removed or unknown events from the kernel.

kldxref_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set to ’’YES’’ to automatically rebuild linker.hints files with kldxref(8) at boot time.

kldxref_clobber

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. If kldxref_enable is true, setting to ’’YES’’ will overwrite existing linker.hints files at boot time. Otherwise, only missing linker.hints files are generated.

kldxref_module_path

(str) Empty by default. A semi-colon (’;’) delimited list of paths containing kld(4) modules. If empty, the contents of the kern.module_path sysctl(8) are used.

pccard_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable PCCARD support at boot time.

pccard_mem

(str) Set to PCCARD controller memory address or ’’DEFAULT’’ for the default value.

pccard_ifconfig

(str) List of arguments to be passed to ifconfig(8) at boot time or on insertion of the card (e.g. ’’inet 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0’’ for a fixed address or ’’DHCP’’ for a DHCP client).

pccard_beep

(int) If 0, set the PCCARD controller to silent mode. If 1, set it to beep mode. If 2, set it to melody mode.

pccard_conf

(str) Path to the configuration file for the pccardd(8) daemon (e.g. /etc/pccard.conf.sample).

pccardd_flags

(str) If pccard_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the pccardd(8) daemon.

pccard_ether_delay

(str) Set the delay before starting dhclient(8) in the /etc/pccard_ether script. This defaults to 5 seconds to work around a bug in the ed(4) driver which can lead to system hangs when using some newer ed(4) based cards.

removable_interfaces

(str) List of removable network interfaces to be supported by /etc/pccard_ether.

tmpmfs

Controls the creation of a /tmp memory file system. Always happens if set to ’’YES’’ and never happens if set to ’’NO’’. If set to anything else, a memory file system is created if /tmp is not writable.

tmpsize

Controls the size of a created /tmp memory file system.

varmfs

Controls the creation of a /var memory file system. Always happens if set to ’’YES’’ and never happens if set to ’’NO’’. If set to anything else, a memory file system is created if /var is not writable.

varsize

Controls the size of a created /var memory file system.

populate_var

Controls the automatic population of the /var file system. Always happens if set to ’’YES’’ and never happens if set to ’’NO’’. If set to anything else, a memory file system is created if /tmp is not writable. Note that this process requires access to certain commands in /usr before /usr is mounted on normal systems.

local_startup

(str) List of directories to search for startup script files.

script_name_sep

(str) The field separator to use for breaking down the list of startup script files into individual filenames. The default is a space. It is not necessary to change this unless there are startup scripts with names containing spaces.

hostname

(str) The fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of this host on the network. This should almost certainly be set to something meaningful, even if there is no network connection. If dhclient(8) is used to set the hostname via DHCP, this variable should be set to an empty string.

ipv6_enable

(bool) Enable support for IPv6 networking. Note that this requires that the kernel have been compiled with options INET6.

nisdomainname

(str) The NIS domain name of this host, or ’’NO’’ if NIS is not used.

dhclient_program

(str) Path to the DHCP client program (/sbin/dhclient, the ISC DHCP client, is the default).

dhclient_flags

(str) Additional flags to pass to the DHCP client program. For the ISC DHCP client, see the dhclient(8) manpage for a description of the command line options available.

background_dhclient

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to start the dhcp client in background. This can cause trouble with applications depending on a working network, but it will provide a faster startup in many cases.

firewall_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to load firewall rules at startup. If the kernel was not built with options IPFIREWALL, the ipfw.ko kernel module will be loaded. See also ipfilter_enable.

ipv6_firewall_enable

(bool) The IPv6 equivalent of firewall_enable. Set to ’’YES’’ to load IPv6 firewall rules at startup. If the kernel was not built with options IPV6FIREWALL, the ip6fw.ko kernel module will be loaded.

firewall_script

(str) This variable specifies the full path to the firewall script to run. The default is /etc/rc.firewall.

ipv6_firewall_script

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of firewall_script.

firewall_type

(str) Names the firewall type from the selection in /etc/rc.firewall, or the file which contains the local firewall ruleset. Valid selections from /etc/rc.firewall are:

open

unrestricted IP access

closed

all IP services disabled, except via ’’lo0’’

client

basic protection for a workstation

simple

basic protection for a LAN.

If a filename is specified, the full path must be given.

ipv6_firewall_type

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of firewall_type.

firewall_quiet

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to disable the display of firewall rules on the console during boot.

ipv6_firewall_quiet

(bool) The IPv6 equivalent of firewall_quiet.

firewall_logging

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable firewall event logging. This is equivalent to the IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE kernel option.

ipv6_firewall_logging

(bool) The IPv6 equivalent of firewall_logging.

firewall_flags

(str) Flags passed to ipfw(8) if firewall_type specifies a filename.

ipv6_firewall_flags

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of firewall_flags.

natd_program

(str) Path to natd(8).

natd_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable natd(8). firewall_enable must also be set to ’’YES’’, and divert(4) sockets must be enabled in the kernel.

natd_interface

(str) This is the name of the public interface on which natd(8) should run. The interface may be given as an interface name or as an IP address.

natd_flags

(str) Additional natd(8) flags should be placed here. The −n or −a flag is automatically added with the above natd_interface as an argument.

ipfilter_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Setting this to ’’YES’’ enables ipf(8) packet filtering.

Typical usage will require putting

ipfilter_enable="YES"
ipnat_enable="YES"
ipmon_enable="YES"
ipfs_enable="YES"

into /etc/rc.conf and editing /etc/ipf.rules and /etc/ipnat.rules appropriately.

Note that ipfilter_enable and ipnat_enable can be enabled independently. ipmon_enable and ipfs_enable both require at least one of ipfilter_enable and ipnat_enable to be enabled.

Having

options IPFILTER
options IPFILTER_LOG
options IPFILTER_DEFAULT_BLOCK

in the kernel configuration file is a good idea, too.

ipfilter_program

(str) Path to ipf(8) (default /sbin/ipf).

ipfilter_rules

(str) Set to /etc/ipf.rules by default. This variable contains the name of the filter rule definition file. The file is expected to be readable for the ipf(8) command to execute.

ipv6_ipfilter_rules

(str) Set to /etc/ipf6.rules by default. This variable contains the IPv6 filter rule definition file. The file is expected to be readable for the ipf(8) command to execute.

ipfilter_flags

(str) Empty by default. This variable contains flags passed to the ipf(8) program.

ipnat_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set it to ’’YES’’ to enable ipnat(1) network address translation. See ipfilter_enable for a detailed discussion.

ipnat_program

(str) Path to ipnat(1) (default /sbin/ipnat).

ipnat_rules

(str) Set to /etc/ipnat.rules by default. This variable contains the name of the file holding the network address translation definition. This file is expected to be readable for the ipnat(1) command to execute.

ipnat_flags

(str) Empty by default. This variable contains flags passed to the ipnat(1) program.

ipmon_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set it to ’’YES’’ to enable ipmon(8) monitoring (logging ipf(8) and ipnat(1) events). Setting this variable needs setting ipfilter_enable or ipnat_enable too. See ipfilter_enable for a detailed discussion.

ipmon_program

(str) Path to ipmon(8) (default /sbin/ipmon).

ipmon_flags

(str) Set to ’’-Ds’’ by default. This variable contains flags passed to the ipmon(8) program. Another typical example would be ’’−D /var/log/ipflog’’ to have ipmon(8) log directly to a file bypassing syslogd(8). Make sure to adjust /etc/newsyslog.conf in such case like this:

/var/log/ipflog 640 10 100 * Z /var/run/ipmon.pid

ipfs_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set it to ’’YES’’ to enable ipfs(8) saving the filter and NAT state tables during shutdown and reloading them during startup again. Setting this variable needs setting ipfilter_enable or ipnat_enable to ’’YES’’ too. See ipfilter_enable for a detailed discussion. Note that if kern_securelevel is set to 3, ipfs_enable cannot be used because the raised securelevel will prevent ipfs(8) from saving the state tables at shutdown time.

ipfs_program

(str) Path to ipfs(8) (default /sbin/ipfs).

ipfs_flags

(str) Empty by default. This variable contains flags passed to the ipfs(8) program.

pf_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Setting this to ’’YES’’ enables pf(4) packet filtering.

Typical usage will require putting

pf_enable="YES"

into /etc/rc.conf and editing /etc/pf.conf appropriately.

device pf

builds pf into the kernel. Otherwise it is loaded from a module.

pf_rules

(str) Path to pf(4) ruleset configuration file (default /etc/pf.conf).

pf_program

(str) Path to pfctl(8) (default /sbin/pfctl).

pf_flags

(str) If pf_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these flags are passed to the pfctl(8) program when loading the ruleset.

pflog_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Setting this to ’’YES’’ enables pflogd(8) which logs packtes from the pf(4) packet filter.

pflog_logfile

(str) If pflog_enable is set to ’’YES’’ this controls where pflogd(8) stores the logfile (default /var/log/pflog). Check /etc/newsyslog.conf to adjust logfile rotation for this.

pflog_program

(str) Path to pflogd(8) (default /sbin/pflogd).

pflog_flags

(str) Empty by default. This variable contains additional flags passed to the pflogd(8) program.

tcp_extensions

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ by default. Setting this to ’’NO’’ disables certain TCP options as described by

RFC 1323 . Setting this to ’’NO’’ might help remedy such problems with connections as randomly hanging or other weird behavior. Some network devices are known to be broken with respect to these options.

log_in_vain

(int) Set to 0 by default. The sysctl(8) variables, net.inet.tcp.log_in_vain and net.inet.udp.log_in_vain, as described in tcp(4) and udp(4), are set to the given value.

tcp_keepalive

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ by default. Setting to ’’NO’’ will disable probing idle TCP connections to verify that the peer is still up and reachable.

tcp_drop_synfin

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Setting to ’’YES’’ will cause the kernel to ignore TCP frames that have both the SYN and FIN flags set. This prevents OS fingerprinting, but may break some legitimate applications. This option is only available if the kernel was built with the TCP_DROP_SYNFIN option.

icmp_drop_redirect

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Setting to ’’YES’’ will cause the kernel to ignore ICMP REDIRECT packets. Refer to icmp(4) for more information.

icmp_log_redirect

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Setting to ’’YES’’ will cause the kernel to log ICMP REDIRECT packets. Note that the log messages are not rate-limited, so this option should only be used for troubleshooting networks. Refer to icmp(4) for more information.

icmp_bmcastecho

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to respond to broadcast or multicast ICMP ping packets. Refer to icmp(4) for more information.

ip_portrange_first

(int) If not set to ’’NO’’, this is the first port in the default portrange. Refer to ip(4) for more information.

ip_portrange_last

(int) If not set to ’’NO’’, this is the last port in the default portrange. Refer to ip(4) for more information.

network_interfaces

(str) Set to the list of network interfaces to configure on this host. For example, if the only network devices in the system are the loopback device (lo0) and a NIC using the ed(4) driver, this could be set to ’’lo0 ed0’’. An ifconfig_interface⟩ variable is also assumed to exist for each value of interface. It is also possible to add IP alias entries here in cases where multiple IP addresses registered against a single interface are desired. Assuming that the interface in question was ed0, it might look something like this:

ifconfig_ed0_alias0="inet 127.0.0.253 netmask 0xffffffff"
ifconfig_ed0_alias1="inet 127.0.0.254 netmask 0xffffffff"

And so on. For each ifconfig_

interface_aliasn⟩ entry that is found, its contents are passed to ifconfig(8). Execution stops at the first unsuccessful access, so if something like this is present:

ifconfig_ed0_alias0="inet 127.0.0.251 netmask 0xffffffff"
ifconfig_ed0_alias1="inet 127.0.0.252 netmask 0xffffffff"
ifconfig_ed0_alias2="inet 127.0.0.253 netmask 0xffffffff"
ifconfig_ed0_alias4="inet 127.0.0.254 netmask 0xffffffff"

Then note that alias4 would not be added since the search would stop with the missing alias3 entry.

If the /etc/start_if.interface⟩ file is present, it is read and executed by the sh(1) interpreter before configuring the interface as specified in the ifconfig_interface⟩ and ifconfig_

interface_aliasn⟩ variables.

It is possible to bring up an interface with DHCP by setting the ifconfig_interface⟩ variable to ’’DHCP’’. For instance, to initialize the ed0 device via DHCP, it is possible to use something like:

ifconfig_ed0="DHCP"

ipv6_network_interfaces

(str) This is the IPv6 equivalent of network_interfaces. Instead of setting the ifconfig variables as ifconfig_interface⟩ they should be set as ipv6_ifconfig_interface⟩ . Aliases should be set as ipv6_ifconfig_

interface_aliasn⟩ . ipv6_prefix_interface⟩ does something. Interfaces that do not have a ipv6_ifconfig_interface⟩ setting will be auto configured by rtsol(8) if the ipv6_gateway_enable is set to ’’NO’’. Note that the IPv6 networking code does not support the /etc/start_if.interface⟩ files.

ipv6_default_interface

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’, this is the default output interface for scoped addresses. Now this works only for IPv6 link local multicast addresses.

cloned_interfaces

(str) Set to the list of clonable network interfaces to create on this host. Entries in cloned_interfaces are automatically appended to network_interfaces for configuration.

gif_interfaces

(str) Set to the list of gif(4) tunnel interfaces to configure on this host. A gifconfig_interface⟩ variable is assumed to exist for each value of interface. The value of this variable is used to configure the link layer of the tunnel according to the syntax of the tunnel option to ifconfig(8). Additionally, this option ensures that each listed interface is created via the create option to ifconfig(8) before attempting to configure it.

sppp_interfaces

(str) Set to the list of sppp(4) interfaces to configure on this host. A spppconfig_interface⟩ variable is assumed to exist for each value of interface. Each interface should also be configured by a general ifconfig_interface⟩ setting. Refer to spppcontrol(8) for more information about available options.

ppp_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the ppp(8) daemon.

ppp_mode

(str) Mode in which to run the ppp(8) daemon. Accepted modes are ’’auto’’, ’’ddial’’, ’’direct’’ and ’’dedicated’’. See the manual for a full description.

ppp_nat

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enables network address translation. Used in conjunction with gateway_enable allows hosts on private network addresses access to the Internet using this host as a network address translating router.

ppp_profile

(str) The name of the profile to use from /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.

ppp_user

(str) The name of the user under which ppp(8) should be started. By default, ppp(8) is started as ’’root’’.

rc_conf_files

(str) This option is used to specify a list of files that will override the settings in /etc/defaults/rc.conf. The files will be read in the order in which they are specified and should include the full path to the file. By default, the files specified are /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.conf.local

gbde_autoattach_all

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, /etc/rc.d/gbde will attempt to automatically initialize your .bde devices in /etc/fstab.

gbde_devices

(str) List the devices that the script should try to attach, or ’’AUTO’’.

gbde_lockdir

(str) The directory where the gbde(4) lockfiles are located. The default lockfile directory is /etc.

The lockfile for each individual gbde(4) device can be overridden by setting the variable gbde_lock_device⟩ , where device is the encrypted device without the ’’/dev/’’ and ’’.bde’’ parts.

gbde_attach_attempts

(int) Number of times to attempt attaching to a gbde(4) device, i.e. how many times the user is asked for the pass-phrase. Default is 3.

gbde_swap_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, any .bde swap devices listed in /etc/fstab will be initialized with a random, one-shot key. Note that this makes recovery of kernel dumps impossible.

root_rw_mount

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ by default. After the file systems are checked at boot time, the root filesystem is remounted as read-write if this is set to ’’YES’’. Diskless systems that mount their filesystem from a read-only remote NFS share should set this to ’’NO’’ in their rc.conf.

fsck_y_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, fsck(8) will be run with the −y flag if the initial preen of the file systems fails.

background_fsck

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, the system will attempt to run fsck(8) in the background where possible.

background_fsck_delay

(int) The amount of time in seconds to sleep before starting a background fsck(8). It defaults to sixty seconds to allow large applications such as the X server to start before disk I/O bandwidth is monopolized by fsck(8).

netfs_types

(str) List of file system types that are network-based. This list should generally not be modified by end users. Use extra_netfs_types instead.

extra_netfs_types

(str) If set to something other than ’’NO’’ (the default), this variable extends the list of file system types for which automatic mounting at startup by rc(8) should be delayed until the network is initialized. It should contain a whitespace-separated list of network file system descriptor pairs, each consisting of a file system type as passed to mount(8) and a human-readable, one-word description, joined with a colon (’:’). Extending the default list in this way is only necessary when third party file system types are used.

syslogd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the syslogd(8) daemon.

syslogd_program

(str) Path to syslogd(8) (default /usr/sbin/syslogd).

syslogd_flags

(str) If syslogd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to syslogd(8).

inetd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the inetd(8) daemon.

inetd_program

(str) Path to inetd(8) (default /usr/sbin/inetd).

inetd_flags

(str) If inetd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to inetd(8).

named_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the named(8) daemon.

named_program

(str) Path to named(8) (default /usr/sbin/named).

named_flags

(str) If named_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to named(8).

named_pidfile

(str) This is the default path to the named(8) daemon’s PID file. Change it if you change the location in named.conf(5).

named_chrootdir

(str) The root directory for a name server run in a chroot(8) environment (default /var/named). If left empty named(8) will not be run in a chroot(8) environment.

named_chroot_autoupdate

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ to disable automatic update of the chroot(8) environment.

named_symlink_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ to disable symlinking of daemon’s PID file into the chroot(8) environment.

kerberos5_server_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to start a Kerberos 5 authentication server at boot time.

kerberos5_server

(str) If kerberos5_server_enable is set to ’’YES’’ this is the path to Kerberos 5 Authentication Server.

kadmind5_server_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to start kadmind(8), the Kerberos 5 Administration Daemon; set to ’’NO’’ on a slave server.

kadmind5_server

(str) If kadmind5_server_enable is set to ’’YES’’ this is the path to Kerberos 5 Administration Daemon.

kpasswdd_server_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to start kpasswdd(8), the Kerberos 5 Password-Changing Daemon; set to ’’NO’’ on a slave server.

kpasswdd_server

(str) If kpasswdd_server_enable is set to ’’YES’’ this is the path to Kerberos 5 Password-Changing Daemon.

rwhod_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rwhod(8) daemon at boot time.

rwhod_flags

(str) If rwhod_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to it.

amd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the amd(8) daemon at boot time.

amd_flags

(str) If amd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to it. See the amd(8) manpage for more information.

amd_map_program

(str) If set, the specified program is run to get the list of amd(8) maps. For example, if the amd(8) maps are stored in NIS, one can set this to run ypcat(1) to get a list of amd(8) maps from the amd.master NIS map.

update_motd

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, /etc/motd will be updated at boot time to reflect the kernel release being run. If set to ’’NO’’, /etc/motd will not be updated.

nfs_client_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the NFS client daemons at boot time.

nfs_access_cache

(int) If nfs_client_enable is set to ’’YES’’, this can be set to ’’0’’ to disable NFS ACCESS RPC caching, or to the number of seconds for which NFS ACCESS results should be cached. A value of 2-10 seconds will substantially reduce network traffic for many NFS operations.

nfs_server_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the NFS server daemons at boot time.

nfs_server_flags

(str) If nfs_server_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the nfsd(8) daemon.

mountd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, and no nfs_server_enable is set, start mountd(8), but not nfsd(8) daemon. It is commonly needed to run CFS without real NFS used.

mountd_flags

(str) If mountd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the mountd(8) daemon.

weak_mountd_authentication

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, allow services like PCNFSD to make non-privileged mount requests.

nfs_reserved_port_only

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, provide NFS services only on a secure port.

nfs_bufpackets

(int) If set to a number, indicates the number of packets worth of socket buffer space to reserve on an NFS client. The kernel default is typically 4. Using a higher number may be useful on gigabit networks to improve performance. The minimum value is 2 and the maximum is 64.

rpc_lockd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’ and also an NFS server, run rpc.lockd(8) at boot time.

rpc_statd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’ and also an NFS server, run rpc.statd(8) at boot time.

rpcbind_program

(str) Path to rpcbind(8) (default /usr/sbin/rpcbind).

rpcbind_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rpcbind(8) service at boot time.

rpcbind_flags

(str) If rpcbind_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the rpcbind(8) daemon.

keyserv_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the keyserv(8) daemon on boot for running Secure RPC.

keyserv_flags

(str) If keyserv_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to keyserv(8) daemon.

pppoed_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the pppoed(8) daemon at boot time to provide PPP over Ethernet services.

pppoed_provider

(str) pppoed(8) listens to requests to this provider and ultimately runs ppp(8) with a system argument of the same name.

pppoed_flags

(str) Additional flags to pass to pppoed(8).

pppoed_interface

(str) The network interface to run pppoed(8) on. This is mandatory when pppoed_enable is set to ’’YES’’.

timed_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the timed(8) service at boot time. This command is intended for networks of machines where a consistent ’’network time’’ for all hosts must be established. This is often useful in large NFS environments where time stamps on files are expected to be consistent network-wide.

timed_flags

(str) If timed_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the timed(8) service.

ntpdate_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run ntpdate(8) at system startup. This command is intended to synchronize the system clock only once from some standard reference. An option to set this up initially (from a list of known servers) is also provided by the sysinstall(8) program when the system is first installed.

ntpdate_hosts

(str) A whitespace-separated list of NTP servers to synchronize with at startup. The default is to use the servers listed in /etc/ntp.conf, if that file exists.

ntpdate_program

(str) Path to ntpdate(8) (default /usr/sbin/ntpdate).

ntpdate_flags

(str) If ntpdate_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the ntpdate(8) command (typically a hostname).

ntpd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the ntpd(8) command at boot time.

ntpd_program

(str) Path to ntpd(8) (default /usr/sbin/ntpd).

ntpd_flags

(str) If ntpd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the ntpd(8) daemon.

nis_client_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the ypbind(8) service at system boot time.

nis_client_flags

(str) If nis_client_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the ypbind(8) service.

nis_ypset_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the ypset(8) daemon at system boot time.

nis_ypset_flags

(str) If nis_ypset_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the ypset(8) daemon.

nis_server_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the ypserv(8) daemon at system boot time.

nis_server_flags

(str) If nis_server_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the ypserv(8) daemon.

nis_ypxfrd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rpc.ypxfrd(8) daemon at system boot time.

nis_ypxfrd_flags

(str) If nis_ypxfrd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the rpc.ypxfrd(8) daemon.

nis_yppasswdd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rpc.yppasswdd(8) daemon at system boot time.

nis_yppasswdd_flags

(str) If nis_yppasswdd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the rpc.yppasswdd(8) daemon.

rpc_ypupdated_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rpc.ypupdated daemon at system boot time.

defaultrouter

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’, create a default route to this host name or IP address (use an IP address if this router is also required to get to the name server!).

ipv6_defaultrouter

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of defaultrouter.

static_routes

(str) Set to the list of static routes that are to be added at system boot time. If not set to ’’NO’’ then for each whitespace separated element in the value, a route_element⟩ variable is assumed to exist whose contents will later be passed to a ’’route add’’ operation. For example:

static_routes="mcast gif0local"
route_mcast="-net 224.0.0.0/4 -iface gif0"
route_gif0local="-host 169.254.1.1 -iface lo0"

ipv6_static_routes

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of static_routes. If not set to ’’NO’’ then for each whitespace separated element in the value, a ipv6_route_element⟩ variable is assumed to exist whose contents will later be passed to a ’’route add −inet6’’ operation.

natm_static_routes

(str) The natmip(4) equivalent of static_routes. If not empty then for each whitespace separated element in the value, a route_element⟩ variable is assumed to exist whose contents will later be passed to a ’’atmconfig natm add’’ operation.

gateway_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, configure host to act as an IP router, e.g. to forward packets between interfaces.

ipv6_gateway_enable

(bool) The IPv6 equivalent of gateway_enable.

router_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run a routing daemon of some sort, based on the settings of router and router_flags.

ipv6_router_enable

(bool) The IPv6 equivalent of router_enable. If set to ’’YES’’, run a routing daemon of some sort, based on the settings of ipv6_router and ipv6_router_flags.

router

(str) If router_enable is set to ’’YES’’, this is the name of the routing daemon to use.

ipv6_router

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of router.

router_flags

(str) If router_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the routing daemon.

ipv6_router_flags

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of router_flags.

mrouted_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the multicast routing daemon, mrouted(8).

mroute6d_enable

(bool) The IPv6 equivalent of mrouted_enable. If set to ’’YES’’, run the IPv6 multicast routing daemon. Note that no IPv6 multicast routing daemon is included in the FreeBSD base system but pim6dd(8) can be installed from the FreeBSD Ports Collection.

mrouted_flags

(str) If mrouted_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the mrouted(8) daemon.

mroute6d_flags

(str) The IPv6 equivalent of mrouted_flags. If mroute6d_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags passed to the IPv6 multicast routing daemon.

mroute6d_program

(str) If mroute6d_enable is set to ’’YES’’, this is the path to the IPv6 multicast routing daemon.

rtadvd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rtadvd(8) daemon at boot time. rtadvd(8) will only run if ipv6_gateway_enable is also set to ’’YES’’. The rtadvd(8) utility sends router advertisement packets to the interfaces specified in rtadvd_interfaces and should only be enabled with great care. You may want to fine-tune rtadvd.conf(5).

rtadvd_interfaces

(str) If rtadvd_enable is set to ’’YES’’ this is the list of interfaces to use.

ipxgateway_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable the routing of IPX traffic.

ipxrouted_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the IPXrouted(8) daemon at system boot time.

ipxrouted_flags

(str) If ipxrouted_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the IPXrouted(8) daemon.

arpproxy_all

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable global proxy ARP.

forward_sourceroute

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’ and gateway_enable is also set to ’’YES’’, source-routed packets are forwarded.

accept_sourceroute

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, the system will accept source-routed packets directed at it.

rarpd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the rarpd(8) daemon at system boot time.

rarpd_flags

(str) If rarpd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the rarpd(8) daemon.

bootparamd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the bootparamd(8) daemon at system boot time.

bootparamd_flags

(str) If bootparamd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the bootparamd(8) daemon.

stf_interface_ipv4addr

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’, this is the local IPv4 address for 6to4 (IPv6 over IPv4 tunneling interface). Specify this entry to enable the 6to4 interface.

stf_interface_ipv4plen

(int) Prefix length for 6to4 IPv4 addresses, to limit peer address range. An effective value is 0-31.

stf_interface_ipv6_ifid

(str) IPv6 interface ID for stf(4). This can be set to ’’AUTO’’.

stf_interface_ipv6_slaid

(str) IPv6 Site Level Aggregator for stf(4).

ipv6_faith_prefix

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’, this is the faith prefix to enable a FAITH IPv6-to-IPv4 TCP translator. You also need faithd(8) setup.

ipv6_ipv4mapping

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’ this enables IPv4 mapped IPv6 address communication (like ::ffff:a.b.c.d).

atm_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable the configuration of ATM interfaces at system boot time. For all of the ATM variables described below, please refer to the atm(8) man page for further details on the available command parameters. Also refer to the files in /usr/share/examples/atm for more detailed configuration information.

atm_load

(str) This is a list of physical ATM interface drivers to load. Typical values are ’’hfa_pci’’ and/or ’’hea_pci’’.

atm_netif_intf

(str) For the ATM physical interface intf, this variable defines the name prefix and count for the ATM network interfaces to be created. The value will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm set netif intf’’ command.

atm_sigmgr_intf

(str) For the ATM physical interface intf, this variable defines the ATM signalling manager to be used. The value will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm attach intf’’ command.

atm_prefix_intf

(str) For the ATM physical interface intf, this variable defines the NSAP prefix for interfaces using a UNI signalling manager. If set to ’’ILMI’’, the prefix will automatically be set via the ilmid(8) daemon. Otherwise, the value will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm set prefix intf’’ command.

atm_macaddr_intf

(str) For the ATM physical interface intf, this variable defines the MAC address for interfaces using a UNI signalling manager. If set to ’’NO’’, the hardware MAC address contained in the ATM interface card will be used. Otherwise, the value will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm set mac intf’’ command.

atm_arpserver_netif

(str) For the ATM network interface netif, this variable defines the ATM address for a host which is to provide ATMARP service. This variable is only applicable to interfaces using a UNI signalling manager. If set to ’’local’’, this host will become an ATMARP server. The value will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm set arpserver netif’’ command.

atm_scsparp_netif

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, SCSP/ATMARP service for the network interface netif will be initiated using the scspd(8) and atmarpd(8) daemons. This variable is only applicable if atm_arpserver_netif⟩ is set to ’’local’’.

atm_pvcs

(str) Set to the list of ATM PVCs to be added at system boot time. For each whitespace separated element in the value, an atm_pvc_element⟩ variable is assumed to exist. The value of each of these variables will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm add pvc’’ command.

atm_arps

(str) Set to the list of permanent ATM ARP entries to be added at system boot time. For each whitespace separated element in the value, an atm_arp_element⟩ variable is assumed to exist. The value of each of these variables will be passed as the parameters of an ’’atm add arp’’ command.

natm_interfaces

(str) Set to the list of natm(4) interfaces that will also be used for HARP through harp(4). If this list is not empty all interfaces in the list will be brought up with ifconfig(8) and harp(4) will be loaded. For this to work the interface drivers must be either compiled into the kernel or must reside on the root partition.

keybell

(str) The keyboard bell sound. Set to ’’normal’’, ’’visual’’, ’’off’’, or ’’NO’’ if the default behavior is desired. For details, refer to the kbdcontrol(1) manpage.

keyboard

(str) If set to a non-null string, the virtual console’s keyboard input is set to this device.

keymap

(str) If set to ’’NO’’, no keymap is installed, otherwise the value is used to install the keymap file in /usr/share/syscons/keymaps/

value.kbd.

keyrate

(str) The keyboard repeat speed. Set to ’’slow’’, ’’normal’’, ’’fast’’, or ’’NO’’ if the default behavior is desired.

keychange

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’, attempt to program the function keys with the value. The value should be a single string of the form: ’’funkey_number new_value [funkey_number new_value ...]’’.

cursor

(str) Can be set to the value of ’’normal’’, ’’blink’’, ’’destructive’’, or ’’NO’’ to set the cursor behavior explicitly or choose the default behavior.

scrnmap

(str) If set to ’’NO’’, no screen map is installed, otherwise the value is used to install the screen map file in /usr/share/syscons/scrnmaps/value⟩ .

font8x16

(str) If set to ’’NO’’, the default 8x16 font value is used for screen size requests, otherwise the value in /usr/share/syscons/fonts/value⟩ is used.

font8x14

(str) If set to ’’NO’’, the default 8x14 font value is used for screen size requests, otherwise the value in /usr/share/syscons/fonts/value⟩ is used.

font8x8

(str) If set to ’’NO’’, the default 8x8 font value is used for screen size requests, otherwise the value in /usr/share/syscons/fonts/value⟩ is used.

blanktime

(int) If set to ’’NO’’, the default screen blanking interval is used, otherwise it is set to value seconds.

saver

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’, this is the actual screen saver to use (blank, snake, daemon, etc).

moused_enable

(str) If set to ’’YES’’, the moused(8) daemon is started for doing cut/paste selection on the console.

moused_type

(str) This is the protocol type of the mouse connected to this host. This variable must be set if moused_enable is set to ’’YES’’. The moused(8) daemon is able to detect the appropriate mouse type automatically in many cases. Set this variable to ’’auto’’ to let the daemon detect it, or select one from the following list if the automatic detection fails.

If the mouse is attached to the PS/2 mouse port, choose ’’auto’’ or ’’ps/2’’, regardless of the brand and model of the mouse. Likewise, if the mouse is attached to the bus mouse port, choose ’’auto’’ or ’’busmouse’’. All other protocols are for serial mice and will not work with the PS/2 and bus mice. If this is a USB mouse, ’’auto’’ is the only protocol type which will work.

microsoft

Microsoft mouse (serial)

intellimouse

Microsoft IntelliMouse (serial)

mousesystems

Mouse systems Corp. mouse (serial)

mmseries

MM Series mouse (serial)

logitech

Logitech mouse (serial)

busmouse

A bus mouse

mouseman

Logitech MouseMan and TrackMan (serial)

glidepoint

ALPS GlidePoint (serial)

thinkingmouse

Kensington ThinkingMouse (serial)

ps/2

PS/2 mouse

mmhittab

MM HitTablet (serial)

x10mouseremote

X10 MouseRemote (serial)

versapad

Interlink VersaPad (serial)

Even if the mouse is not in the above list, it may be compatible with one in the list. Refer to the man page for moused(8) for compatibility information.

It should also be noted that while this is enabled, any other client of the mouse (such as an X server) should access the mouse through the virtual mouse device, /dev/sysmouse, and configure it as a ’’sysmouse’’ type mouse, since all mouse data is converted to this single canonical format when using moused(8). If the client program does not support the ’’sysmouse’’ type, specify the ’’mousesystems’’ type. It is the second preferred type.

moused_port

(str) If moused_enable is set to ’’YES’’, this is the actual port the mouse is on. It might be /dev/cuaa0 for a COM1 serial mouse, /dev/psm0 for a PS/2 mouse or /dev/mse0 for a bus mouse, for example.

moused_flags

(str) If moused_type is set, these are the additional flags to pass to the moused(8) daemon.

mousechar_start

(int) If set to ’’NO’’, the default mouse cursor character range 0xd0-0xd3 is used, otherwise the range start is set to value character, see vidcontrol(1). Use if the default range is occupied in the language code table.

allscreens_flags

(str) If set, vidcontrol(1) is run with these options for each of the virtual terminals (/dev/ttyv*). For example, ’’−m on’’ will enable the mouse pointer on all virtual terminals if moused_enable is set to ’’YES’’.

allscreens_kbdflags

(str) If set, kbdcontrol(1) is run with these options for each of the virtual terminals (/dev/ttyv*). For example, ’’−h 200’’ will set the syscons(4) scrollback (history) buffer to 200 lines.

cron_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the cron(8) daemon at system boot time.

cron_program

(str) Path to cron(8) (default /usr/sbin/cron).

cron_flags

(str) If cron_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to cron(8).

cron_dst

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable the special handling of transitions to and from the Daylight Saving Time in cron(8) (equivalent to using the flag −s).

lpd_program

(str) Path to lpd(8) (default /usr/sbin/lpd).

lpd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the lpd(8) daemon at system boot time.

lpd_flags

(str) If lpd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the lpd(8) daemon.

mta_start_script

(str) This variable specifies the full path to the script to run to start a mail transfer agent. The default is /etc/rc.sendmail. The sendmail_* variables which /etc/rc.sendmail uses are documented in the rc.sendmail(8) man page.

dumpdev

(str) Indicates the device (usually a swap partition) to which a crash dump should be written in the event of a system crash. The value of this variable is passed as the argument to dumpon(8). To disable crash dumps, set this variable to ’’NO’’.

dumpdir

(str) When the system reboots after a crash and a crash dump is found on the device specified by the dumpdev variable, savecore(8) will save that crash dump and a copy of the kernel to the directory specified by the dumpdir variable. The default value is /var/crash. Set to ’’NO’’ to not run savecore(8) at boot time when dumpdir is set.

savecore_flags

(str) If crash dumps are enabled, these are the flags to pass to the savecore(8) utility.

enable_quotas

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to turn on user disk quotas on system startup via the quotaon(8) command.

check_quotas

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable user disk quota checking via the quotacheck(8) command.

accounting_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable system accounting through the accton(8) facility.

ibcs2_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable iBCS2 (SCO) binary emulation at system initial boot time.

ibcs2_loaders

(str) If not set to ’’NO’’ and if ibcs2_enable is set to ’’YES’’, this specifies a list of additional iBCS2 loaders to enable.

linux_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable Linux/ELF binary emulation at system initial boot time.

osf1_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable OSF/1 (Digital UNIX) binary emulation at system initial boot time. (alpha)

svr4_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, enable SysVR4 emulation at boot time.

sysvipc_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, load System V IPC primitives at boot time.

clear_tmp_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to have /tmp cleaned at startup.

ldconfig_paths

(str) Set to the list of shared library paths to use with ldconfig(8). NOTE: /usr/lib will always be added first, so it need not appear in this list.

ldconfig_paths_aout

(str) Set to the list of shared library paths to use with ldconfig(8) legacy a.out(5) support.

ldconfig_insecure

(bool) The ldconfig(8) utility normally refuses to use directories which are writable by anyone except root. Set this variable to ’’YES’’ to disable that security check during system startup.

kern_securelevel_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to set the kernel security level at system startup.

kern_securelevel

(int) The kernel security level to set at startup. The allowed range of value ranges from −1 (the compile time default) to 3 (the most secure). See init(8) for the list of possible security levels and their effect on system operation.

lomac_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to enable Low Watermark Mandatory Access Control (LOMAC) at boot time. This security model enforces integrity constraints for system processes; see lomac(4) for a complete description of the LOMAC model, as well as its impact on system operation.

start_vinum

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to start vinum(8) at system boot time.

sshd_program

(str) Path to the SSH server program (/usr/sbin/sshd is the default).

sshd_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to start sshd(8) at system boot time.

sshd_flags

(str) If sshd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags to pass to the sshd(8) daemon.

usbd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, run the usbd(8) daemon at boot time.

usbd_flags

(str) If usbd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags passed to the usbd(8) daemon.

watchdogd_enable

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, start the watchdogd(8) daemon at boot time. This requires that the kernel have been compiled with a watchdog(4) compatible device.

watchdogd_flags

(str) If watchdogd_enable is set to ’’YES’’, these are the flags passed to the watchdogd(8) daemon.

jail_enable

(bool) If set to ’’NO’’, any configured jails will not be started.

jail_list

(str) A space separated list of names for jails. This is purely a configuration aid to help identify and configure multiple jails. The names specified in this list will be used to identify settings common to an instance of a jail. Assuming that the jail in question was named vjail, you would have the following dependant variables:

jail_vjail_hostname="jail.example.com"
jail_vjail_ip="192.168.1.100"
jail_vjail_rootdir="/var/jails/vjail/root"
jail_vjail_exec="/bin/sh /etc/rc"

The last one is optional. It defaults to /etc/rc if it is not set.

jail_set_hostname_allow

(bool) If set to ’’NO’’, do not allow the root user in a jail to set its hostname.

jail_socket_unixiproute_only

(bool) If set to ’’NO’’, do not allow any protocol, besides TCP/IP, to be used within a jail.

jail_sysvipc_allow

(bool) If set to ’’YES’’, allow applications within a jail to use System V IPC.

unaligned_print

(bool) If set to ’’NO’’, unaligned access warnings will not be printed. (alpha)

isdn_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. When set to ’’YES’’, starts the isdnd(8) daemon at system boot time.

isdn_flags

(str) Set to ’’−dn −d0x1f9’’ by default. Additional flags to pass to isdnd(8) (but see isdn_fsdev and isdn_ttype for certain tunable parameters).

isdn_ttype

(str) Set to ’’cons25’’ by default. The terminal type of the output device when isdnd(8) operates in full-screen mode.

isdn_screenflags

(str) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. The video mode for full-screen mode (only for syscons(4) console driver, see vidcontrol(1) for valid modes).

isdn_fsdev

(str) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. The output device for isdnd(8) in full-screen mode (or ’’NO’’ for daemon mode).

isdn_trace

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. When set to ’’YES’’, enables the ISDN protocol trace utility isdntrace(8) at system boot time.

isdn_traceflags

(str) Set to ’’−f /var/tmp/isdntrace0’’ by default. Flags for isdntrace(8).

pcvt_verbose

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. When set to ’’YES’’, verbose messages about the actions done by the start script are displayed. Note: the pcvt(4) driver must be compiled into the kernel before the pcvt(4) related options described here take any effect.

pcvt_keymap

(str) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Use this to configure a national keyboard mapping found in the /usr/share/misc/keycap.pcvt file of keyboard mappings. (See also the manual pages keycap(5) and keycap(3) for usage of pcvt(4)’s keycap database and the manual page kcon(1) option −m for national keyboard mapping configuration.)

pcvt_keydel

(int) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Used to set the keyboard key repeat delay value. Valid values are in the range 0..3 for delay values of 250, 500, 750 and 1000 msec. (See also the kcon(1) manual page.)

pcvt_keyrate

(int) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Used to set the keyboard key repetition rate value. Valid values are in the range 0..31 for repetition values of 2..30 characters per second.

pcvt_keyrepeat

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set to ’’YES’’ to enable automatic keyboard key repeating.

pcvt_force24

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set to ’’YES’’ to force pcvt(4) to use 24 lines only (in 25 lines mode) for compatibility with the original VT220 terminal.

pcvt_hpext

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set to ’’YES’’ to enable the display and functionality of function key labels (as found on Hewlett-Packard terminals such as the HP2392A and the HP700/92 in ANSI mode).

pcvt_lines

(int) Set to ’’NO’’ by default resulting in a value of 25. Used to set the number of lines on the screen. For VGA displays, valid values are 25, 28, 40 and 50 lines. (See also the scon(1) manual page.)

pcvt_blanktime

(int) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Used to set the screen saver timeout in seconds for values greater than zero.

pcvt_cursorh

(int) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Used to set the cursor top scanline. (See also the cursor(1) manual page.)

pcvt_cursorl

(int) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Used to set the cursor bottom scanline.

pcvt_monohigh

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ by default. Set to ’’YES’’ to set intensity to high on monochrome monitors. (See also the scon(1) manual page, option −p, for more information on changing VGA palette values.)

harvest_interrupt

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to use hardware interrupts as an entropy source. Refer to random(4) for more information.

harvest_ethernet

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to use LAN traffic as an entropy source. Refer to random(4) for more information.

harvest_p_to_p

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to use serial line traffic as an entropy source. Refer to random(4) for more information.

entropy_dir

(str) Set to ’’NO’’ to disable caching entropy via cron(8). Otherwise set to the directory used to store entropy files in.

entropy_file

(str) Set to ’’NO’’ to disable caching entropy through reboots. Otherwise set to the filename used to store cached entropy through reboots. This file should be located on the root file system to seed the random(4) device as early as possible in the boot process.

entropy_save_sz

(int) Size of the entropy cache files saved by save-entropy periodically.

entropy_save_num

(int) Number of entropy cache files to save by save-entropy periodically.

ipsec_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to run setkey(8) on ipsec_file at boot time.

ipsec_file

(str) Configuration file for setkey(8).

dmesg_enable

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to save dmesg(8) to /var/run/dmesg.boot on boot.

rcshutdown_timeout

(int) If set, start a watchdog timer in the background which will terminate rc.shutdown if shutdown(8) has not completed within the specified time (in seconds).

virecover_enable

(bool) Set to ’’NO’’ to prevent the system from trying to recover pre-maturely terminated vi(1) sessions.

ugidfw_enable

’’NO’’ Load the mac_bsdextended(4) module upon system initialization and load a default ruleset file.

bsdextended_script

’’/etc/rc.bsdextended’’ The default mac_bsdextended(4) ruleset file to load.

swapoff

(bool) Set to ’’YES’’ to remove swap partitions upon shutdown.

ramdisk_units

(str) A list of one or more ramdisk units to configure with mdconfig(8) and newfs(8) in time to be mounted from fstab(5). Each listed unit X must specify at least a type in a ramdisk_

X_config variable.

ramdisk_
X
_config

(str) Arguments to mdconfig(8) for ramdisk X. At minimum a −t type must be specified, where type must be one of malloc or swap.

ramdisk_
X
_newfs

(str) Optional arguments passed to newfs(8) to initialize ramdisk X.

ramdisk_
X
_owner

(str) An ownership specification passed to chown(8) after the specified ramdisk unit X has been mounted. Both the md(4) device and the mount point will be changed.

ramdisk_
X
_perms

(str) A mode string passed to chmod(1) after the specified ramdisk unit X has been mounted. Both the md(4) device and the mount point will be changed.

FILES
/etc/defaults/rc.conf
/etc/rc.conf
/etc/rc.conf.local
SEE ALSO

catman(1), chmod(1), gdb(1), info(1), kbdcontrol(1), makewhatis(1), vi(1), vidcontrol(1), ip(4), kld(4), tcp(4), udp(4), exports(5), motd(5), newsyslog.conf(5), accton(8), amd(8), apm(8), atm(8), chown(8), cron(8), dhclient(8), ifconfig(8), inetd(8), isdnd(8), isdntrace(8), kldxref(8), lpd(8), mdconfig(8), mountd(8), moused(8), mrouted(8), named(8), newfs(8), nfsd(8), ntpd(8), ntpdate(8), pcnfsd(8), quotacheck(8), quotaon(8), rc(8), rc.sendmail(8), route(8), routed(8), rpcbind(8), rpc.lockd(8), rpc.statd(8), rwhod(8), savecore(8), sshd(8), swapon(8), sysctl(8), syslogd(8), timed(8), usbd(8), vinum(8), yp(8), ypbind(8), ypserv(8), ypset(8)

HISTORY

The rc.conf file appeared in FreeBSD 2.2.2.

AUTHORS

Jordan K. Hubbard.

BSD October 28, 2004 BSD