blob: 3a58578de4036a418587bddef2edc567c0783a64 [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/sh
PROGRAM="sysctl"
SYSCTL_ARGS=""
# shellcheck source=/dev/null
[ -r "/etc/default/$PROGRAM" ] && . "/etc/default/$PROGRAM"
# Files are read from directories in the SYSCTL_SOURCES list, in the given
# order. A file may be used more than once, since there can be multiple
# symlinks to it. No attempt is made to prevent this.
SYSCTL_SOURCES="/etc/sysctl.d/ /usr/local/lib/sysctl.d/ /usr/lib/sysctl.d/ /lib/sysctl.d/ /etc/sysctl.conf"
# The "--system" option activates "--ignore", which is bad because invalid
# variable settings in the configuration files will not be reported on the
# system log. Use some scripting to mimic the --system behavior but still
# reporting errors. Users not interested on error report can put "-e" in
# SYSCTL_ARGS.
#
# The file redirections do the following:
#
# - stdout is redirected to syslog with facility.level "kern.info"
# - stderr is redirected to syslog with facility.level "kern.err"
# - file dscriptor 4 is used to pass the result to the "start" function.
#
run_program() {
# shellcheck disable=SC2086 # we need the word splitting
find $SYSCTL_SOURCES -maxdepth 1 -name '*.conf' -print0 2> /dev/null | \
xargs -0 -r -n 1 readlink -f | {
prog_status="OK"
while :; do
read -r file
if [ -z "$file" ]; then
echo "$prog_status" >&4
break
fi
echo "* Applying $file ..."
/sbin/sysctl -p "$file" $SYSCTL_ARGS || prog_status="FAIL"
done 2>&1 >&3 | /usr/bin/logger -t sysctl -p kern.err
} 3>&1 | /usr/bin/logger -t sysctl -p kern.info
}
start() {
printf '%s %s: ' "$1" "$PROGRAM"
status=$(run_program 4>&1)
echo "$status"
if [ "$status" = "OK" ]; then
return 0
fi
return 1
}
case "$1" in
start)
start "Running";;
restart|reload)
start "Rerunning";;
stop)
:;;
*)
echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|reload}"
exit 1
esac