Chapter 2 Booting and Shutting Down - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 2 Booting and Shutting Down

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Chapter 2 Booting and Shutting Down Kim Grempler (Sections 2.0 to 2.3) Leon Dague (Sections 2.4 to 2.7) Bootstrapping A.k.a. Booting Kernel loaded into memory and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 2 Booting and Shutting Down


1
Chapter 2Booting and Shutting Down
  • Kim Grempler (Sections 2.0 to 2.3)
  • Leon Dague (Sections 2.4 to 2.7)

2
Bootstrapping
  • A.k.a. Booting
  • Kernel loaded into memory and executes
  • Initialization tasks performed
  • System available to users
  • Potential Problems when booting
  • Errors in configuration files, missing/unreliable
    equipment, or damaged filesystems
  • Boot configuration is first task of system
    administrator, on new system
  • Booting is hardware-dependent

3
Reference Chapters
  • Chapter 3 Root Account
  • Chapter 4 The Filesystem
  • Chapter 7 Devices and Drivers
  • Chapter 8 Serial Devices
  • Chapter 9 Installing a Boot program
  • Chapter 13 Configuring the Kernal
  • Chapter 31 Daemons

4
2 Booting Modes
  • Automatic
  • Performs boot without external assistance
  • Manual
  • Automatic procedure until initialization scripts
    are run by operator
  • Single-user mode most system processes not
    running and users unable to log in

5
Six Steps in Booting Process
  • Loading and initialization of the kernel
  • Device detection and configuration
  • Creation of spontaneous system processes
  • Operator intervention (single user boot only)
  • Execution of system startup scripts
  • Multi-user operation
  • Admin. has little control of steps above. Boot
    configuration via editing system startup scripts

6
Step 1 Loading and Initialization of the Kernal
  • Kernal (e.g., program) is loaded into memory to
    be executed
  • Pathname of kernal is vendor dependent
  • Example /unix or /vmunix
  • 2-stage loading process
  • 1st small boot program read into memory to
    enable kernal loading (outside domain of Unix)
  • 2nd kernal runs tests to determine memory
    availability
  • kernels run in a fixed amount of memory and know
    what to reserve for internal storage and I/O
    buffers.

7
Step 2 Device Detection and Configuration
  • Kernal performs hardware check
  • General hardware device info is incorporated in
    kernal configuration
  • Locate and initialize each device
  • Acquire more info via drivers
  • If not found, will disable hardware
  • If hardware added, must reboot, to access

8
Step 3 Creation of Spontaneous System Processes
  • After basic initialization, kernel creates
    spontaneous processes in users space
  • Not created via normal UNIX fork mechanism
  • fork creates copy of the original process, with
    new ID, that is identical to the parent
  • BSD has 3 processes
  • Swapper - process 0 init - process1
    pagedaemon - process 2
  • ATT varies
  • sched - process 0 init - process 1 various
    memory handlers
  • Note- ONLY INIT USER PROCESS
  • Kernal role complete init handles processes for
    basic operations and UNIX daemons

9
Step 4 Operator Intervention (Single-User Boot
Only)
  • init notified via command-line flag from kernel
  • init creates shell and waits for it to terminate
    (ltcontrol-dgt or exit) before continuing on with
    rest of startup procedure
  • Always in bourne shell (e.g., sh) and runs as
    root with root partition mounted
  • Available programs located in /bin, /sbin, /etc,
    and /usr other filesystems must be mounted
    by operator
  • Daemons not available
  • fsck (checks and repairs filesystems) must be run
    by hand

10
Step 5 Execution of System Startup Scripts
  • The location, content, and organization of shell
    (e.g., sh) scripts vary from system to system
  • BSD kept in /etc and names begin with rc
  • ATT kept in /etc/init.d with links made to other
    directories such as /etc/rc0.d, /etc/rc1.d
  • Examples of tasks performed in initialization
    scripts
  • Set computer name Set time zone fsck disk
    check
  • Mount systems disks Remove files from /tmp
  • Configure network interfaces
  • Start up daemons and network services
  • Turn on accounting and quotas

11
Step 6 Multi-User Operation
  • To complete boot process and allow user access,
    init produces getty process on each workstation
  • BSD init has only two states single-user and
    multi-user
  • ATT init has one single-user and several
    multi-user run levels to determine which system
    resources are enabled

12
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.boot
  • First rc script to run is /etc/rc.boot
  • The first two lines set HOME and PATH
    environment variables
  • Executes basic system commands during boot
  • hostname file in /etc for each network interface
  • enables IP networking on each interface
  • Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP)
  • Find hostname from other machine on NW using
    hostconfig program and use NFS to mount
    filesystems
  • System Administrator intervene to fix problem

13
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.boot (cont.)
  • Address or hostname of default Internet gateway
    is read from /etc/defaultrouter
  • non-local NW connections up prior to more
    complicated routing in boot process
  • /usr filesystem read-only for system check to see
    if /fastboot exists
  • Yes system shut down cleanly filesystems in
    consistent state
  • No all filesystems listed in /etc/fstab checked
    in fsck
  • If disks check cleanly rc.boot runs
    /etc/rc.single

14
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.single
  • Commands in /etc/rc.single are executed at boot
    time even if not using single mode
  • Remounts / and /usr filesystems read/write
  • if not remounted system not able to come up
  • Cleans out /etc/mtabfile and adds entries for /
    and /usr
  • was previously mounted but not in mtab file
    because root filesystem not writable
  • /usr/kvm mounted clean up shared library cache

15
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.single
  • /etc/utmp file cleaned out
  • contains user list of current log ins
  • tzsetup command sets local time zone status of
    daylight savings time (kernal is GMT)
  • loadkeys command sets keyboard mapping
  • rc.single exitsrc.boot exits
  • No problems in autoboot mode the next init
    process is /etc/rc
  • If problemsingle-user (sh process) on console

16
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc
  • /etc/rc is the main system startup up script in
    autoboot after rc.boot
  • if single-user rc after shell is terminated
  • if root filesystems not writable rerun rc.single
  • clean up shared library cache
  • remove /fastboot file
  • /etc/passwd file edited system crashes
  • vipw and /etc/rc script make sure password file
    not destroyed at crash

17
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc (cont.)
  • Enable quotas
  • /bin/ps -u cleans out the ps database (status of
    processes)
  • /etc/nologin created by shutdown to prevent
    logins during shutdown
  • executes rc.local script
  • swapon -a to make use of all swap partitions
    listed in etc/fstab
  • expreserve looks in /tmp to find files that were
    edited when system went down

18
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc (cont.)
  • Start standard system daemons (i.e., lpd, inetd,
    update, uushed)

19
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.local
  • /etc/rc.local contains commands for local system
  • portmap daemon maps RPC (remote procedure call)
    service numbers to the NW ports of appropriate
    servers
  • NIS (NW info service) Domain Name set from
    /etc/default domain
  • set subnet mask of all machines interfaces
  • default route reset if no default routing daemon
    run
  • list current configuration of NW interfaces on
    console

20
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.local (cont.)
  • All NFS filesystems mounted
  • named (server for Domain Name system) maps
    between hostnames and Internet addresses
  • Client side NFS daemon run (biod)
  • syslogd responsible for managing log messages
  • save kernel core dump in /var/crash/hostname
  • Image saved on swap partition save image to real
    filesystem
  • Clean up temporary mail lock files and start
    sendmail

21
Sample BSD Startup Scripts/etc/rc.local (cont.)
  • Make machine NFS Server if filesystems need to be
    exported
  • Daemon to support diskless clients
  • rpc.statd and rpc.lockd manage advisory locks on
    NFS filesystems
  • Start automount daemon
  • 3rd party vendor install scripts
  • Appletalk protocol stack started
  • Licensed software add-ons

22
Sample ATT Startup Scripts
  • Leon Continue
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