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34 lines
537 B

#!/bin/sh
. /lib/dracut-lib.sh
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
case "$1" in
--onetime)
onetime="yes";;
--settled)
settled="-settled";;
--unique)
unique="yes";;
--name)
name="$2";shift;;
*)
break;;
esac
shift
done
if [ -z "$unique" ]; then
job="${name}$$"
else
job="${name:-$1}"
job=${job##*/}
initqueue now loops until /dev/root exists or root is mounted init now has the following points to inject scripts: /cmdline/*.sh scripts for command line parsing /pre-udev/*.sh scripts to run before udev is started /pre-trigger/*.sh scripts to run before the main udev trigger is pulled /initqueue/*.sh runs in parallel to the udev trigger Udev events can add scripts here with /sbin/initqueue. If /sbin/initqueue is called with the "--onetime" option, the script will be removed after it was run. If /initqueue/work is created and udev >= 143 then this loop can process the jobs in parallel to the udevtrigger. If the udev queue is empty and no root device is found or no root filesystem was mounted, the user will be dropped to a shell after a timeout. Scripts can remove themselves from the initqueue by "rm $job". /pre-mount/*.sh scripts to run before the root filesystem is mounted NFS is an exception, because it has no device node to be created and mounts in the udev events /mount/*.sh scripts to mount the root filesystem NFS is an exception, because it has no device node to be created and mounts in the udev events If the udev queue is empty and no root device is found or no root filesystem was mounted, the user will be dropped to a shell after a timeout. /pre-pivot/*.sh scripts to run before the real init is executed and the initramfs disappears All processes started before should be killed here. The behaviour of the dmraid module demonstrates how to use the new mechanism. If it detects a device which is part of a raidmember from a udev rule, it installs a job to scan for dmraid devices, if the udev queue is empty. After a scan, it removes itsself from the queue.
16 years ago
fi
echo "$@" > "/tmp/${job}.sh"
initqueue now loops until /dev/root exists or root is mounted init now has the following points to inject scripts: /cmdline/*.sh scripts for command line parsing /pre-udev/*.sh scripts to run before udev is started /pre-trigger/*.sh scripts to run before the main udev trigger is pulled /initqueue/*.sh runs in parallel to the udev trigger Udev events can add scripts here with /sbin/initqueue. If /sbin/initqueue is called with the "--onetime" option, the script will be removed after it was run. If /initqueue/work is created and udev >= 143 then this loop can process the jobs in parallel to the udevtrigger. If the udev queue is empty and no root device is found or no root filesystem was mounted, the user will be dropped to a shell after a timeout. Scripts can remove themselves from the initqueue by "rm $job". /pre-mount/*.sh scripts to run before the root filesystem is mounted NFS is an exception, because it has no device node to be created and mounts in the udev events /mount/*.sh scripts to mount the root filesystem NFS is an exception, because it has no device node to be created and mounts in the udev events If the udev queue is empty and no root device is found or no root filesystem was mounted, the user will be dropped to a shell after a timeout. /pre-pivot/*.sh scripts to run before the real init is executed and the initramfs disappears All processes started before should be killed here. The behaviour of the dmraid module demonstrates how to use the new mechanism. If it detects a device which is part of a raidmember from a udev rule, it installs a job to scan for dmraid devices, if the udev queue is empty. After a scan, it removes itsself from the queue.
16 years ago
if [ -n "$onetime" ]; then
echo '[ -e "$job" ] && rm "$job"' >> "/tmp/${job}.sh"
initqueue now loops until /dev/root exists or root is mounted init now has the following points to inject scripts: /cmdline/*.sh scripts for command line parsing /pre-udev/*.sh scripts to run before udev is started /pre-trigger/*.sh scripts to run before the main udev trigger is pulled /initqueue/*.sh runs in parallel to the udev trigger Udev events can add scripts here with /sbin/initqueue. If /sbin/initqueue is called with the "--onetime" option, the script will be removed after it was run. If /initqueue/work is created and udev >= 143 then this loop can process the jobs in parallel to the udevtrigger. If the udev queue is empty and no root device is found or no root filesystem was mounted, the user will be dropped to a shell after a timeout. Scripts can remove themselves from the initqueue by "rm $job". /pre-mount/*.sh scripts to run before the root filesystem is mounted NFS is an exception, because it has no device node to be created and mounts in the udev events /mount/*.sh scripts to mount the root filesystem NFS is an exception, because it has no device node to be created and mounts in the udev events If the udev queue is empty and no root device is found or no root filesystem was mounted, the user will be dropped to a shell after a timeout. /pre-pivot/*.sh scripts to run before the real init is executed and the initramfs disappears All processes started before should be killed here. The behaviour of the dmraid module demonstrates how to use the new mechanism. If it detects a device which is part of a raidmember from a udev rule, it installs a job to scan for dmraid devices, if the udev queue is empty. After a scan, it removes itsself from the queue.
16 years ago
fi
mv -f "/tmp/${job}.sh" /initqueue${settled}/
[ -z "$settled" ] && >> /initqueue/work