Administration Reference
Purpose
Defines server processes for the BOS Server to monitor
Description
The BosConfig file lists the processes that the Basic OverSeer
(BOS) Server monitors on its server machine, and thus defines which AFS server
processes run on the machine. It specifies how the BOS Server reacts
when a process fails, and also defines the times at which the BOS Server
automatically restarts processes as part of performance maintenance.
The file must reside in the /usr/afs/local directory on each AFS
server machine.
A server process entry in the BosConfig file records the
following information:
- The entry type, which is one of the following:
- cron
- Designates a server process that runs periodically instead of
continuously. The BOS Server starts a cron process only at specified
times, not whenever it fails. All standard AFS process entries except
fs are simple (there are no standard cron processes).
- fs
- Designates a group of interdependent server processes. If one of
the processes fails, the BOS Server must coordinate its restart with the
restart of the other processes in the group, possibly by stopping them
first.
There is only one standard entry of this type, for which the conventional
name is fs. It combines three server processes: the
File Server (fileserver process), the Volume Server
(volserver process), and the Salvager (salvager
process). These processes all operate on the same data--the AFS
data stored on an AFS server machine's /vicep partitions and
mounted in the AFS filespace--but in different ways. Grouping the
processes prevents them from attempting to access the same data
simultaneously, which can cause corruption.
During normal operation, the Salvager process is not active. If the
File Server process fails, however, the BOS Server stops the Volume Server
process and runs the Salvager process to correct any corruption that resulted
from the failure. (The administrator can also issue the bos
salvage command to invoke the Salvager process.) If the Volume
Server fails, the BOS Server can restart it without stopping the File Server
or running the Salvager.
- simple
- Designates a server process that runs independently of any other on the
server machine. If a simple process fails, the BOS Server does not have
to coordinate its restart with any other process.
- The entry name. The conventional name for an entry in the
BosConfig file and the associated process matches the binary
filename. When issuing any bos command that takes the
-instance argument, identify each process by the name used in the
BosConfig file. For a list of the names, see the bos
create reference page.
- The process's status flag, which determines whether the BOS
Server attempts to start the process in two cases: each time the BOS
Server itself restarts, and when the process fails. The
BosConfig file currently uses a binary notation to indicate whether
the BOS Server attempts to restart the process as necessary or does not
monitor it at all. For the sake of clarity, the AFS documentation
refers to the flags as Run and NotRun instead.
Only a system administrator, not the BOS Server, can change the flag.
- One or more command parameters which the BOS Server invokes to
start the process or processes associated with the entry:
- A cron entry has two command parameters, the first the complete
pathname to the program, and the second the time at which the BOS Server
invokes the program.
- The fs entry has three command parameters, each the complete
pathname to the fileserver, volserver, and
salvager programs, in that order.
- A simple entry has only one command parameter, the complete
pathname to the program.
In addition to server process entries, the BosConfig file
specifies the times at which the BOS Server performs two types of automatic
process restarts:
- The general restart time at which the BOS Server restarts itself
and then each process for which the entry in the BosConfig file has
status flag Run. The default setting is Sunday at 4:00
a.m.
- The binary restart time at which the BOS Server restarts any
server process for which the time stamp on the binary file in the
/usr/afs/bin directory is later than the last restart time for the
process. The default is 5:00 a.m.
Although the BosConfig file is in ASCII format, do not use a
text editor to alter it. Its format is subject to change and
incorrectly formatted entries can prevent server startup in ways that are
difficult to diagnose. Instead always use the appropriate commands from
the bos command suite:
- The bos create command to create an entry in the file and start
the associated process
- The bos delete command to remove an entry from the file after
the bos stop command is used to stop the associated process
- The bos getrestart command to display the times at which the
BOS Server performs automatic restarts
- The bos setrestart command to set the times at which the BOS
Server performs automatic process restarts
- The bos start command to change an entry's status flag to
Run and start the associated process
- The bos status command to display all processes listed in the
file
- The bos stop command to change an entry's status flag to
NotRun and stop the associated process
There are also bos commands that start and stop processes
without changing entries in the BosConfig file. The BOS
Server reads the BosConfig file only when it starts, transferring
the information into its memory. Thus a process's status as
represented in the BOS Server's memory can diverge from its status in the
BosConfig file. The following commands change a
process's status in the BOS Server's memory only:
- The bos restart command restarts a specified set of processes,
all processes, or all processes other than the BOS Server
- The bos shutdown command stops a process
- The bos startup command starts a process
Related Information
bos create
bos delete
bos getrestart
bos restart
bos setrestart
bos shutdown
bos start
bos startup
bos status
bos stop
bos salvage
fileserver
salvager
volserver
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