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SUSE:SLE-12-SP1:GA
spamassassin.11888
init.spamd
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File init.spamd of Package spamassassin.11888
#!/bin/bash # Copyright (c) 1995-2002 SuSE GmbH Nuernberg, Germany. # # Author: Kurt Garloff, Carsten Hoeger # Please send feedback to http://www.suse.de/feedback/ # # /etc/init.d/spamd # # and symbolic its link # # /usr/sbin/rcspamd # # LSB compliant service control script; see http://www.linuxbase.org/spec/ # # System startup script for daemon spamd # ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: spamd # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog # Default-Start: 3 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 2 6 # Description: Start spamd to allow efficient filtering of mail # through spamassassin. Note: Read README.spamd about security implications # Short-Description: Start the spamassassin daemon ### END INIT INFO # # Note on Required-Start: It does specify the init script ordering, # not real dependencies. Depencies have to be handled by admin # resp. the configuration tools (s)he uses. # Source SuSE config (if still necessary, most info has been moved) test -r /etc/rc.config && . /etc/rc.config # Check for missing binaries (stale symlinks should not happen) SPAMD_BIN=/usr/sbin/spamd PIDFILE=/var/run/spamd.pid test -x $SPAMD_BIN || exit 5 # Check for existence of needed config file and read it # # Later, we may want to make startup behaviour (user ID, firewalling, ...) # configurable, as there are security implications (read README.spamd). SPAMD_CONFIG=/etc/sysconfig/spamd test -r $SPAMD_CONFIG || exit 6 . $SPAMD_CONFIG # Shell functions sourced from /etc/rc.status: # rc_check check and set local and overall rc status # rc_status check and set local and overall rc status # rc_status -v ditto but be verbose in local rc status # rc_status -v -r ditto and clear the local rc status # rc_failed set local and overall rc status to failed # rc_failed <num> set local and overall rc status to <num><num> # rc_reset clear local rc status (overall remains) # rc_exit exit appropriate to overall rc status # rc_active checks whether a service is activated by symlinks . /etc/rc.status # First reset status of this service rc_reset # Return values acc. to LSB for all commands but status: # 0 - success # 1 - generic or unspecified error # 2 - invalid or excess argument(s) # 3 - unimplemented feature (e.g. "reload") # 4 - insufficient privilege # 5 - program is not installed # 6 - program is not configured # 7 - program is not running # # Note that starting an already running service, stopping # or restarting a not-running service as well as the restart # with force-reload (in case signalling is not supported) are # considered a success. case "$1" in start) echo -n "Starting spamd " ## Start daemon with startproc(8). If this fails ## the echo return value is set appropriate. # NOTE: startproc returns 0, even if service is # already running to match LSB spec. startproc -p $PIDFILE $SPAMD_BIN $SPAMD_ARGS -r $PIDFILE # Remember status and be verbose rc_status -v ;; stop) echo -n "Shutting down spamd " ## Stop daemon with killproc(8) and if this fails ## set echo the echo return value. PID=$( cat $PIDFILE ) grep -q $SPAMD_BIN /proc/$PID/cmdline && kill -TERM $PID # Remember status and be verbose rc_status -v ;; try-restart) ## Stop the service and if this succeeds (i.e. the ## service was running before), start it again. ## Note: try-restart is not (yet) part of LSB (as of 0.7.5) $0 status >/dev/null && $0 restart # Remember status and be quiet rc_status ;; restart) ## Stop the service and regardless of whether it was ## running or not, start it again. $0 stop sleep 1 $0 start sleep 1 # Remember status and be quiet rc_status ;; force-reload) ## Signal the daemon to reload its config. Most daemons ## do this on signal 1 (SIGHUP). ## If it does not support it, restart. echo -n "Reload service spamd " ## if it supports it: #killproc -HUP $SPAMD_BIN #touch /var/run/spamd.pid #rc_status -v ## Otherwise: $0 stop && $0 start rc_status ;; reload) ## Like force-reload, but if daemon does not support ## signalling, do nothing (!) # If it supports signalling: echo -n "Reload service spamd " PID=$( cat $PIDFILE ) grep -q $SPAMD_BIN /proc/$PID/cmdline && kill -HUP $PID touch /var/run/spamd.pid rc_status -v ;; status) echo -n "Checking for service spamd " ## Check status with checkproc(8), if process is running ## checkproc will return with exit status 0. # Return value is slightly different for the status command: # 0 - service running # 1 - service dead, but /var/run/ pid file exists # 2 - service dead, but /var/lock/ lock file exists # 3 - service not running # NOTE: checkproc returns LSB compliant status values. checkproc -p $PIDFILE $SPAMD_BIN rc_status -v ;; probe) ## Optional: Probe for the necessity of a reload, ## print out the argument which is required for a reload. test /etc/mail/spamassassin/local.cf -nt /var/run/spamd.pid && echo reload ;; *) echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|status|try-restart|restart|force-reload|reload|probe}" exit 1 ;; esac rc_exit
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