Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 07:43:37 +0200 From: Jonathan McKeown <jonathan+freebsd-questions@hst.org.za> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: BIND9 won't start Message-ID: <200712240743.37582.jonathan%2Bfreebsd-questions@hst.org.za> In-Reply-To: <839aec700712231627k4457c65dx45791c76cd01b2fa@mail.gmail.com> References: <476ECA9B.4090805@free.fr> <476EE526.2000501@free.fr> <839aec700712231627k4457c65dx45791c76cd01b2fa@mail.gmail.com>
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On Monday 24 December 2007 02:15, Jonathan Horne wrote:
> otherwise, there is always 'forcestart' intead of 'start'.
and Darren Spruell wrote:
> You can get around the need to activate the variable by
> prefixing your commands with the 'force' keyword (e.g.
> /etc/rc.d/named forcestart, etc.)
To start a service which isn't enabled in rc.conf, it's better to use
onestart
From the rc.subr(8) manpage:
force Skip the checks for rcvar being set to ``YES'', and
sets rc_force=YES. This ignores argument_precmd
returning non-zero, and ignores any of the required_*
tests failing, and always returns a zero exit status.
one Skip the checks for rcvar being set to ``YES'', but
performs all the other prerequisite tests.
Jonathan
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