sysidconfig(1M) System Administration Commands sysidconfig(1M)NAMEsysidconfig - execute system configuration applications, or define set
of system configuration applications
SYNOPSISsysidconfig [-lv] [-a application] [-b basedir]
[-r application]
DESCRIPTION
Invoked without any options, the sysidconfig program executes a list of
applications. An application on this list is referred to as a "system
configuration application." Every application on this list will be
passed one command-line argument, -c. This flag will cause the system
configuration application to perform its configuration function. With‐
out options, sysidconfig should only be invoked by startup scripts,
which occurs during the initial installation and during a reconfigure
reboot.
All applications on the list will be executed, if possible. All activ‐
ity taken by the sysidconfig program is logged in the sysidconfig log
file, /var/log/sysidconfig.log. If one or more of the applications on
the list are either not present at execution time, are not executable,
or execute but return a failure code upon completion, then that infor‐
mation will be logged as well. Successful completion of the program can
be assumed if no error message is present in the log file. Programs are
executed sequentially, with only one configuration application active
at a time.
Executed with the -l, -a, or -r options, the sysidconfig program allows
the super-user to list the defined configuration applications, and to
add items to or remove items from that list. Running sysidconfig with
options is the only way to view or manipulate the list. Only the super-
user can execute the sysidconfig program with options.
The -b and -v options change the behavior of sysidconfig, and can be
used with or without the list manipulation options discussed above. The
-b basedir option is used to specify a reference root directory other
than the default, /. The -v option duplicates the log file output on
stdout.
By default, no SPARC based applications exist on this list.
This application is an extension of the sysidtool(1M) suite of pro‐
grams. It is executed during initial installation and during a recon‐
figure reboot, before the window system has been started. Graphical
User Interface (GUI) applications will not execute successfully if they
are added to the list of configuration applications via sysidconfig-a.
This program is referenced, but not fully described, in the sysid‐
tool(1M) manual page.
OPTIONS
The valid options are:
-a application
Add the named application to the list of defined applications. When
next invoked without arguments, sysidconfig will run this newly
added application after all previously defined applications. appli‐
cation must be a fully qualified path name that is not currently on
the list of applications to execute.
-b basedir
Specify an alternate base directory (/ is defined as the default
base directory if no other is specified). The specified directory
is used as the root directory when adding, listing, removing, or
executing configuration applications. The log file where informa‐
tion is recorded is in /var/log, relative to the specified basedir.
In the log file, the basedir is not noted. This means, for example,
that if the super-user on a diskless client's server executes:
sysidconfig-b /export/root/client -a /sbin/someapp
then the diskless client client would have /sbin/someapp executed
upon reconfigure reboot. The diskless client's log file would note
that /sbin/someapp was added, not /export/root/client/sbin/someapp.
Note -
The root file system of any non-global zones must not be refer‐
enced with the -b option. Doing so might damage the global zone's
file system, might compromise the security of the global zone,
and might damage the non-global zone's file system. See zones(5).
-l
List defined configuration applications. Applications will be exe‐
cuted one at a time, in the order shown in the list.
-r application
Remove the named application from the list of defined applications.
application must be a fully qualified path name and it must be on
the existing list of applications to execute.
-v
Verbose mode. This option echoes all information sent to the log
file to stdout. Such information includes timestamp information
about when the program was executed, the names of applications
being executed, and results of those executions.
RETURN VALUES
The sysidconfig program will return 0 if it completes successfully.
When executed with the -r or -a options, error conditions or warnings
will be reported on stderr. If the requested action completes success‐
fully, an exit code of 0 will be returned.
ERRORS
EPERM
The program was executed by a user other than the super-user.
EINVAL
Option -l, -a, or -r was passed and the action could not be com‐
pleted successfully.
FILES
/var/log/sysidconfig.log
sysidconfig log file
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │system/management/sysidtool │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOsys-unconfig(1M), sysidtool(1M), attributes(5)DIAGNOSTICS
When run without options, a log of the sysidconfig program's activity
can be found in /var/log/sysidconfig.log. This file contains a time‐
stamp log of each program executed, its resulting stderr output, and
its exit code. If an application in the list was not found or is not
executable, that will also be noted.
SunOS 5.11 23 Jun 2009 sysidconfig(1M)