#! /bin/sh # Copyright (c) 1995-2000 SuSE GmbH Nuernberg, Germany. # # Author: Werner Fink , 1996-2001 # # /etc/init.d/cron # # and symbolic its link # # /usr/sbin/rccron # # System startup script for the cron daemon # ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: cron # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog $time # Should-Start: $network smtp # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog # Should-Stop: $network smtp # Default-Start: 2 3 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 6 # Short-Description: Cron job service # Description: Cron job service ### END INIT INFO CRON_BIN=/usr/sbin/cron test -x $CRON_BIN || exit 5 PIDFILE=/var/run/cron.pid # 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 set local and overall rc status to # rc_reset clear local rc status (overall remains) # rc_exit exit appropriate to overall rc status . /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. allow_deny_move_info() { echo "WARNING: /var/spool/cron/allow and /var/spool/cron/deny have moved" echo "to /etc/cron.allow and /etc/cron.deny." echo "Please merge or move these files to get cron access rules restored." } case "$1" in start) for al_de in {allow,deny}{,.rpmsave,.rpmorig} ; do if [ -f /var/spool/cron/$al_de ] ; then allow_deny_move_info break fi done echo -n "Starting CRON daemon" ## Start daemon with startproc(8). If this fails ## the echo return value is set appropriate. # NOTE: startproc return 0, even if service is # already running to match LSB spec. startproc -p $PIDFILE $CRON_BIN #startproc -f $CRON_BIN # Remember status and be verbose rc_status -v ;; stop) echo -n "Shutting down CRON daemon" ## Stop daemon with killproc(8) and if this fails ## set echo the echo return value. killproc -TERM -p $PIDFILE $CRON_BIN # 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 $0 start # 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 Cron" ## if it supports it: ## cron monitors /etc/crontab anyway checkproc $CRON_BIN rc_status -v ## Otherwise: #$0 stop && $0 start #rc_status ;; reload) ## Like force-reload, but if daemon does not support ## signalling, do nothing (!) ## Otherwise if it does not support reload: rc_status -v ;; status) echo -n "Checking for Cron: " ## Check status with checkproc(8), if process is running ## checkproc will return with exit status 0. # Status has a 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 $CRON_BIN rc_status -v ;; probe) ## Optional: Probe for the necessity of a reload, ## give out the argument which is required for a reload. ;; *) echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|status|try-restart|restart|force-reload|reload|probe}" exit 1 ;; esac rc_exit