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-rw-r--r-- | sysconfig.txt | 246 |
1 files changed, 246 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/sysconfig.txt b/sysconfig.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000..b2e106cb --- /dev/null +++ b/sysconfig.txt @@ -0,0 +1,246 @@ + +Files in /etc/sysconfig +======================= + +/etc/sysconfig/clock: + + deprecated values from earlier releases: + + CLOCKMODE=GMT indicates that the clock is set to UTC + CLOCKMODE=ARC on alpha only indicates the ARC console's + 42-year time offset is in effect + + currently correct values: + + UTC=true indicates that the clock is set to UTC; anything + else indicates that it is set to local time + ARC=true on alpha only indicates the ARC console's + 42-year time offset is in effect; otherwise the normal + Unix epoch is assumed + + +/etc/sysconfig/keyboard: + + KEYTABLE=<keytable file> + for example: KEYTABLE="/usr/lib/kbd/keytables/us.map" + +/etc/sysconfig/mouse: + + MOUSETYPE=microsoft|mouseman|mousesystems|ps/2|msbm|logibm|atibm| + logitech|mmseries|mmhittab + XEMU3=yes|no (emulate three buttons with two buttons whenever + necessary, most notably in X) + + In addition, /dev/mouse points to the mouse device. + +/etc/sysconfig/network: + + NETWORKING=yes|no + HOSTNAME=<fqdn by default, but whatever hostname you want> + Note: for compatibility with some old software people might + install (like trn), the /etc/HOSTNAME file should contain the + same value as here. + FORWARD_IPV4=yes|no (The current Red Hat Linux installation + sets this to no by default for RFC compliance, but if + FORWARD_IPV4 is not set at all, forwarding is *enabled* + for compatibility with the configuration files used on + Red Hat Linux versions 4.2 and earlier.) + GATEWAY=<gateway IP> + GATEWAYDEV=<gateway device> (e.g. eth0) + NISDOMAIN=<nis domain name> + +/etc/sysconfig/pcmcia: + + PCMCIA=yes|no + PCIC=i82365|tcic + PCIC_OPTS=<socket driver (i82365 or tcic) timing parameters> + CORE_OPTS=<pcmcia_core options> + CARDMGR_OPTS=<cardmgr options> + +/etc/sysconfig/amd: + + ADIR=/.automount (normally never changed) + MOUNTPTS='/net /etc/amd.conf' (standard automount stuff) + AMDOPTS= (extra options for AMD) + +/etc/sysconfig/tape: + + DEV=/dev/nst0 + Tape device. Use the non-rewinding one for these scripts. + + For SCSI tapes this is /dev/nst#, where # is the number of the + tape drive you want to use. If you only have one then use + nst0. + + For IDE tapes you use /dev/ht#, where # is the number of the tape + drive you want to use (usually ht0). + + For floppy tape drives use /dev/ftape. + + ADMIN=root + Person to mail to if the backup fails for any reason + + SLEEP=5 + Time to sleep between tape operations. Some drives need a bit + more than others, but 5 seems to work for 8mm, 4mm, and DLT + + BLOCKSIZE=32768 + This worked fine for 8mm, then 4mm, and now DLT. An optimal + setting is probably however much data your drive writes at one + time. + + SHORTDATE=$(date +%y:%m:%d:%H:%M) + A short date string, used in backup log filenames. + + DAY=$(date +log-%y:%m:%d) + This is used for the log file directory. + + DATE=$(date) + Regular date string, used in log files. + + LOGROOT=/var/log/backup + Root of the logging directory + + LIST=$LOGROOT/incremental-list + This is the file name the incremental backup will use to store + the incremental list. It will be $LIST-{some number}. + + DOTCOUNT=$LOGROOT/.count + For counting as you go to know which incremental list to use + + COUNTER=$LOGROOT/counter-file + For rewinding when done...might not use. + + BACKUPTAB=/etc/backuptab + The file in which we keep our list of backup(s) we want to make. + + + +Files in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ +======================================== + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup: +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifdown: + + Symlinks to /sbin/ifup and /sbin/ifdown, respectively. + These are the only two scripts "in" this directory that should + be called directly; these two scripts call all the other + scripts as needed. These symlinks are here for legacy purposes + only -- they'll will probably be removed in future versions, so + only /sbin/ifup and /sbin/ifdown should currently be used. + + These scripts take one argument normally: the name of the device + (e.g. eth0). They are called with a second argument of "boot" + during the boot sequence so that devices that are not meant to + be brought up on boot (ONBOOT=no, see below) can be ignored at + that time. + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/network-functions: + + Not really a public file. Contains functions which the scripts use + for bringing interfaces up and down. In particular, it contains + most of the code for handling alternative interface configurations + and interface change notification through netreport. + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<interface-name> and +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<interface-name>-<clone-name>: + + The first defines an interface, and the second contains + only the parts of the definition that are different in a + "clone" (or alternative) interface. For example, the + network numbers might be different, but everything else + might be the same, so only the network numbers would be + in the clone file, but all the device information would + be in the base ifcfg file. + + The items that can be defined in an ifcfg file depend on the + interface type. The really obvious ones I'm not going to + bother to define; you can figure out what "IPADDR" is, I + think... :-) + + Base items: + DEVICE=<name of physical device (except dynamically-allocated PPP + devices where it is the "logical name") + IPADDR= + NETMASK= + NETWORK= + BROADCAST= + GATEWAY= + ONBOOT=yes|no + USERCTL=yes|no + BOOTPROTO=none|bootp|dhcp + + PPP/SLIP items: + PERSIST=yes|no + MODEMPORT=<device, say /dev/modem> + LINESPEED=<speed, say 115200> + DEFABORT=yes|no (tells netcfg whether or not to put default + abort strings in when creating/editing the chat script and/or + dip script for this interface) + + PPP-specific items + DEFROUTE=yes|no (set this interface as default route?) + ESCAPECHARS=yes|no (simplified interface here doesn't let people + specify which characters to escape; almost everyone can use + asyncmap 00000000 anyway, and they can set PPPOPTIONS to + asyncmap foobar if they want to set options perfectly) + HARDFLOWCTL=yes|no (yes imples "modem crtscts" options) + PPPOPTIONS=<arbitrary option string; is placed last on the + command line, so it can override other options like asyncmap + that were specified differently> + PAPNAME=<"name $PAPNAME" on pppd command line> (note that + the "remotename" option is always specified as the logical + ppp device name, like "ppp0" (which might perhaps be the + physical device ppp1 if some other ppp device was brought + up earlier...), which makes it easy to manage pap/chap + files -- name/password pairs are associated with the + logical ppp device name so that they can be managed + together. + + In principal, I'm not aware of anything that would keep + the logical PPP device names from being "worldnet" or + "myISP" instead of ppp0-pppN) + REMIP=<remote ip address, normally unspecified> + MTU= + MRU= + DISCONNECTTIMEOUT=<number of seconds, default currently 5> + (time to wait before re-establishing the connection after + a successfully-connected session terminates before attempting + to establish a new connection.) + RETRYTIMEOUT=<number of seconds, default currently 60> + (time to wait before re-attempting to establish a connection + after a previous attempt fails.) + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/chat-<interface-name>: + + chat script for PPP or SLIP connection intended to establish + the connection. For SLIP devices, a DIP script is written + from the chat script; for PPP devices, the chat script is used + directly. + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/dip-<interface-name> + + A write-only script created from the chat script by netcfg. + Do not modify this. In the future, this file may disappear + by default and created on-the-fly from the chat script if + it does not exist. + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-post + + Called when any network device EXCEPT a SLIP device comes + up. Calls /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-routes to + bring up static routes that depend on that device. Brings + up aliases for that device. Sets the hostname if it is not + already set and a hostname can be found for the IP for that + device. Sends SIGIO to any programs that have requested + notification of network events. + + Could be extended to fix up nameservice configuration, call + arbitrary scripts, etc, as needed. + +/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifdhcpc-done + + Called by dhcpcd once dhcp configuration is complete; sets + up /etc/resolv.conf from the version dhcpcd dropped in + /etc/dhcpc/resolv.conf + |