NetBSD/etc/defaults/rc.conf

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# $NetBSD: rc.conf,v 1.63 2004/10/09 02:18:48 dsainty Exp $
#
# /etc/defaults/rc.conf --
# default configuration of /etc/rc.conf
#
# see rc.conf(5) for more information.
#
# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE DIRECTLY; IT MAY BE REPLACED DURING A SYSTEM UPGRADE.
# EDIT /etc/rc.conf INSTEAD.
#
# DEVELOPERS: Please edit share/sushi/system/rcconf/form when modifying this
# file to keep it in sync.
#
# Use program=YES to enable program, NO to disable it. program_flags are
# passed to the program on the command line.
#
# Uncomment this if you want to use local paths in rc.
#
#export PATH=$PATH:/usr/pkg/sbin:/usr/pkg/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin
# Uncomment the following to execute each /etc/rc.d script in
# the current shell rather than in a subshell. This may be
# faster on very slow machines that have an expensive fork(2).
# NOTE: USE THIS AT YOUR OWN RISK; A ROGUE COMMAND
# MAY INADVERTENTLY PREVENT BOOT TO MULTIUSER.
#
#rc_fast_and_loose=YES
# Additional flags to the rcorder(8) that's run by /etc/rc.
#
rc_rcorder_flags=""
# If this is set to NO, shutdown(8) will not run /etc/rc.shutdown.
#
do_rcshutdown=YES
# Additional flags to the rcorder(8) that's run by /etc/rc.shutdown.
#
rcshutdown_rcorder_flags=""
# If this is non-blank, use as the number of seconds to run a watchdog
# timer which will terminate /etc/rc.shutdown if the timeout expires.
#
rcshutdown_timeout=""
# Basic network configuration
#
# Fully Qualified Internet Domain Name (a.k.a. hostname, e.g. foo.baz.edu).
# If blank, use /etc/myname.
#
hostname=""
# If there's only one way out of your network, set this to the hostname
# or the IP address of the router that will get your packets off the LAN.
# If blank, use /etc/mygate.
#
defaultroute=""
# The NIS domain name (formerly known as Yellow Pages); not in any way
# related to Internet domain names.
# If blank, use /etc/defaultdomain.
#
domainname=""
# Filesystems to mount early in boot-up.
# Note that `/var' is needed in $critical_filesystems_local (or
# implied as part of `/') as certain services that need /var (such as
# dhclient) may be needed to get the network operational enough to mount
# the $critical_filesystems_remote.
#
critical_filesystems_local="/var"
critical_filesystems_remote="/usr"
# Swap device controls.
#
no_swap=NO # Set to YES if you have purposefully setup no swap
# partitions and don't want to be warned about it.
swapoff=NO # Remove block-type swap partitions upon shutdown
# Concatenated disk driver.
#
ccd=YES
# RAIDframe driver (manually configured devices).
#
raidframe=YES
# Crypto file system.
#
cgd=YES
# One-time actions and programs on boot-up.
#
lkm=NO # Run /etc/rc.lkm. /usr needs to be part of /, or
# part of critical_filesystems_local.
savecore=YES savecore_flags="-z"
savecore_dir="/var/crash"
clear_tmp=YES # clear /tmp after reboot
update_motd=YES # updates /etc/motd
dmesg=YES dmesg_flags="" # write /var/run/dmesg.boot
accounting=NO # uses /var/account/acct
newsyslog=NO newsyslog_flags="" # trim log files
quota=YES # check and enable quotas
ldconfig=YES # rebuild a.out ldconfig cache
# cope with other OSes using the real time clock at localtime on this
# machine (by adjusting kern.rtc_offset at boot)
rtclocaltime=NO
# NOTE: default coredump name now set in /etc/sysctl.conf
# Automatically check for and repair the botched superblock problem
fixsb=YES
#
# File system check flags; default to preen mode, checking filesystems
# that are listed in /etc/fstab in parallel as the fsck pass number
# permits. Fix minor faults automatically, and exit with non 0 only
# when major errors occur.
#
fsck_flags=-p
# Security setting. If $securelevel is non-empty, the system securelevel
# is set to this value early in the boot sequence. Otherwise the default
# action is taken (see init(8)).
#
securelevel="" # securelevel to set to
# To set the IP address of an interface either use
# ifconfig_xxN="IP-NO"
# where xxN is the interface. If this variable is not set then
# contents of the file /etc/ifconfig.xxN is used.
# Networking startup.
#
ipfilter=NO # uses /etc/ipf.conf
ipnat=NO # uses /etc/ipnat.conf
ipfs=NO ipfs_flags="" # save/load ipnat and ipf states
ipsec=NO # uses /etc/ipsec.conf
ipmon=NO ipmon_flags="-Dns" # syslog ipfilter messages
pf=NO
pflogd=NO
racoon=NO # IKE daemon
auto_ifconfig=YES # config all avail. interfaces
net_interfaces="" # used only if above is NO
flushroutes=YES # flush routes in netstart
dhclient=NO # behave as a DHCP client
dhclient_flags="" # blank: config all interfaces
ntpdate=NO ntpdate_flags="-b -s" # May need '-u' thru firewall
ppp_peers="" # /etc/ppp/peers to call
ip6mode=host # host, autohost or router
ip6sitelocal=NO # IPv6 sitelocal addrs
rtsol=NO rtsol_flags="-a" # for ip6mode=autohost only
# Special treatment for interfaces that need to be downed on
# shutdown (because they might cause unnecessary costs or block resources
# on the peer). All pppoe* interfaces are automatically included in this
# list, add others here manually.
#force_down_interfaces=""
ifwatchd=NO # execute up/down scripts for in-kernel PPPoE interfaces
ifwatchd_flags="-u /etc/ppp/ip-up -d /etc/ppp/ip-down pppoe0"
# ALTQ configuration/monitoring daemon
altqd=NO altqd_flags=""
# Daemons required by servers. These are not needed for strictly client use.
#
# inetd is used to start the IP-based services enabled in /etc/inetd.conf
#
inetd=YES inetd_flags="-l" # -l logs libwrap
# identd
#
identd=NO identd_flags="-b -l -u nobody"
# rpcbind (formerly known as 'portmap') is used to look up RPC-based services.
#
rpcbind=NO rpcbind_flags="-l" # -l logs libwrap
# Commonly used daemons.
#
syslogd=YES syslogd_flags="-s" # -s "secure" unix domain only
cron=YES
named=NO named_flags="" # see below for named_chrootdir
timed=NO timed_flags=""
ntpd=NO ntpd_flags="" # see below for ntpd_chrootdir
postfix=NO
lpd=NO lpd_flags="-s" # -s "secure" unix domain only
sshd=NO sshd_flags=""
ssh_keygen_flags="-b 1024" # generate 1024 bit keys if host keys missing
# sendmail can now be run either as a suid root binary or as a sgid
# smmsp binary. In the former case, you must not have the file
# /etc/mail/submit.cf, otherwise sendmail will behave as if it was
# sgid. This can result in mail not being delivered. You must also
# manually set the owner and mode on the sendmail binary.
#
# The smmsp process is a sendmail helper that periodically flushes the
# "client" queue in the sgid case. If you are using sendmail as a
# suid root program, then smmsp is not needed.
#
# The default setting for sendmail here is NO, but gets re-examined by
# the rc.d/sendmail startup script when it runs. The script sets
# _rc_d_sendmail to "check", and then causes all rc.conf settings to
# be re-evaluated. If the value of $sendmail after this is "check",
# the script then checks to see if any changes have been made to the
# default mailer configuration. If no changes are detected, the value
# of $sendmail is set to YES to cause the sendmail daemon to be
# started. This is so that local processes can send mail without it
# getting left in the submission queue. Changes are defined as any of
# the following:
#
# * path to sendmail in mailer.conf is different
# * sendmail not found at the default path
# * sendmail_suidroot is yes
# * if the binary is not sgid to smmsp
#
# If $sendmail is set to YES or NO in /etc/rc.conf, these checks are
# skipped.
#
sendmail=${_rc_d_sendmail:-NO}
sendmail_flags="-Lsm-mta -bd -q30m"
sendmail_suidroot=NO
smmsp=NO smmsp_flags="-Lsm-msp-queue -Ac -q30m"
# To run the named(8) DNS server as an unprivileged user under a
# chroot(2) cage, uncomment the following after migrating the contents
# of /etc/namedb to /var/chroot/named/etc/namedb
#
#named_chrootdir="/var/chroot/named"
# To run the ntpd(8) NTP server as an unprivileged user under a
# chroot(2) cage, uncomment the following, after ensuring that:
# - The kernel has "pseudo-device clockctl" compiled in
# - /dev/clockctl is present
#
#ntpd_chrootdir="/var/chroot/ntpd"
# Routing daemons.
#
routed=NO routed_flags="-q"
gated=NO
mrouted=NO mrouted_flags=""
route6d=NO route6d_flags=""
rtsold=NO rtsold_flags="" # for ip6mode=autohost only
# Daemons used to boot other hosts over a network.
#
rarpd=NO rarpd_flags="-a"
bootparamd=NO bootparamd_flags=""
dhcpd=NO dhcpd_flags="-q"
dhcrelay=NO dhcrelay_flags=""
rbootd=NO rbootd_flags=""
mopd=NO mopd_flags="-a"
ndbootd=NO ndbootd_flags="-s /tftpboot /tftpboot/bootyy"
rtadvd=NO rtadvd_flags=""
# X11 daemons.
#
xfs=NO xfs_flags="" # X11 font server
xdm=NO xdm_flags="" # X11 display manager; needs
# wscons=YES for local displays.
# YP (NIS) daemons.
#
ypbind=NO ypbind_flags=""
ypserv=NO ypserv_flags="-d"
yppasswdd=NO yppasswdd_flags=""
# NFS daemons and parameters.
#
mountd=NO mountd_flags="" # NFS mount requests daemon
nfs_client=NO # enable client daemons
nfs_server=NO # enable server daemons
nfsd_flags="-6tun 4"
lockd=NO lockd_flags=""
statd=NO statd_flags=""
amd=NO amd_flags="-l syslog -x error,noinfo,nostats"
amd_dir=/amd # mount dir
# Heimdal Kerberos 5 KDC (with Kerberos IV compatibility)
kdc=NO kdc_flags=""
# ISDN daemon
isdnd=NO isdnd_flags=""
# Other daemons.
#
rwhod=NO
# Hardware daemons.
#
apmd=NO apmd_flags="" # APM power management daemon.
poffd=NO # x68k power switch monitor
poffd_flags="'shutdown -p now'"
powerd=NO powerd_flags="" # power management daemon
screenblank=NO screenblank_flags="" # wscons and FBIO screenblanker
moused=NO # serial mouse handler
moused_flags="-p /dev/tty00"
wdogctl=NO # watchdog timer control
# wdogctl_flags="-k devicename"
# Configuration of "wscons" console driver virtual screens.
#
wscons=NO wscons_flags="" # setup wscons from wscons.conf
# Configuration of "wsmoused" console driver cut-n-paste support
#
wsmoused=NO wsmoused_flags=""
# Configuration of "tpctl" touch panel calibration utility
#
tpctl=NO tpctl_flags=""
# Mixer setting
#
mixerctl=NO mixerctl_mixers="" # "mixer0 mixer1" means saving
# and restoring their settings
# Vi recovery notification. Vi(1)'s -r option can recover files which were
# accidentally closed. See vi(1) for more details.
#
virecover=YES
# Verified exec signature loading.
#
veriexec=NO