Files in /etc/sysconfig ======================= /etc/sysconfig/system: AUTOSWAP=yes|no Set to 'yes' to enable automatic swapon of all partitions with the proper swap magic. This allows setting up swap without editing /etc/fstab. /etc/sysconfig/keyboard: KEYTABLE= for example: KEYTABLE="/usr/lib/kbd/keytables/us.map" /etc/sysconfig/mouse: MOUSETYPE=microsoft|mouseman|mousesystems|ps/2|msbm|logibm|atibm| logitech|mmseries|mmhittab XEMU3=yes|no (emulate three buttons with two buttons whenever necessary, most notably in X) In addition, /dev/mouse points to the mouse device. /etc/sysconfig/network: NETWORKING=yes|no IPV4_NETWORKING=yes|no IPV6_NETWORKING=yes|no HOSTNAME= Note: for compatibility with some old software people might install (like trn), the /etc/HOSTNAME file should contain the same value as here. NISDOMAIN= Note: set this only if you use NIS system. DNS domainname should be set in /etc/resolv.conf IGNORE_ICMP_BCAST_IPV4=yes|no (Please note that if you accept ICMP echo requests with a broadcast/multicast destination address your network may be used as an exploder for denial of service packet flooding attacks to other hosts. SPOOFING_IPV4=yes|no (anti spoofing protection) GATEWAY= GATEWAYDEV= (e.g. eth0) IPX=yes|no IPXAUTOPRIMARY=on|off (note, that MUST be on|off, not yes|no) IPXAUTOFRAME=on|off (again, not yes|no) IPXINTERNALNETNUM= IPXINTERNALNODENUM= All the IPX stuff is optional, and should default to off. /etc/sysconfig/static-nat Configuration file for static Network Address Translation (NAT). Contains lines of the form:
via NAT will translate address
to . /etc/sysconfig/static-routes: Contains lines of the form: to [type] / via may be a device name to have the route brought up and down with the device, or "any" to have the correct devices calculated at run time. [type] is optional. RH style isn't supported! Also you can set few options after "": tos metric table src
realm mtu or mtu lock window rtt nexthop scope protocol onlink equalize For more informations see iproute2 documentation. /etc/sysconfig/static-routes6: Same as /etc/sysconfig/static-routes but for IPv6. /etc/sysconfig/routed: SILENT=yes|no EXPORT_GATEWAY=yes|no /etc/sysconfig/pcmcia: PCMCIA=yes|no PCIC=i82365|tcic PCIC_OPTS= CORE_OPTS= CARDMGR_OPTS= /etc/sysconfig/amd: ADIR=/.automount (normally never changed) MOUNTPTS='/net /etc/amd.conf' (standard automount stuff) AMDOPTS= (extra options for AMD) /etc/sysconfig/tape: DEV=/dev/nst0 Tape device. Use the non-rewinding one for these scripts. For SCSI tapes this is /dev/nst#, where # is the number of the tape drive you want to use. If you only have one then use nst0. For IDE tapes you use /dev/ht#, where # is the number of the tape drive you want to use (usually ht0). For floppy tape drives use /dev/ftape. ADMIN=root Person to mail to if the backup fails for any reason SLEEP=5 Time to sleep between tape operations. Some drives need a bit more than others, but 5 seems to work for 8mm, 4mm, and DLT BLOCKSIZE=32768 This worked fine for 8mm, then 4mm, and now DLT. An optimal setting is probably however much data your drive writes at one time. SHORTDATE=$(date +%y:%m:%d:%H:%M) A short date string, used in backup log filenames. DAY=$(date +log-%y:%m:%d) This is used for the log file directory. DATE=$(date) Regular date string, used in log files. LOGROOT=/var/log/backup Root of the logging directory LIST=$LOGROOT/incremental-list This is the file name the incremental backup will use to store the incremental list. It will be $LIST-{some number}. DOTCOUNT=$LOGROOT/.count For counting as you go to know which incremental list to use COUNTER=$LOGROOT/counter-file For rewinding when done...might not use. BACKUPTAB=/etc/backuptab The file in which we keep our list of backup(s) we want to make. /etc/sysconfig/sendmail: DAEMON=yes|no yes implies -bd QUEUE=1h given to sendmail as -q$QUEUE -q option is not given to sendmail if /etc/sysconfig/sendmail exists and QUEUE is empty or undefined. /etc/sysconfig/i18n LANG= is the default setting of localedata configuration (ISO-639-1 language code with ISO-3166-1 country code and optional variant and/or encoding, eg. fr_CA, fr_CA.UTF-8); LC_CTYPE=, LC_COLLATE=, LC_MESSAGES=, LC_NUMERIC=, LC_MONETARY=, LC_TIME= are the individual category settings LC_ALL= overrides all of the above LC_* LANGUAGE= can be a : separated list of language codes see locale(7) for details SYSTERM= use to set default TERM environment variable The above variables are used in rc.sysinit. SYSFONT= any font that is legal when used as /usr/sbin/setfont $SYSFONT ... (See kbd package for sysfont command) UNIMAP= any unicode font that is legal fodder for /usr/sbin/setfont $SYSFONT-u $UNIMAP The above is used by the /sbin/setsysfont command (which is run by rc.sysinit at boot time). /etc/sysconfig/ The following are used when starting service. SERVICE_LIMITS="-u unlimited -c 0" System limits for this service. SERVICE_CPUSET="name" CPUSET to run this service in. SERVICE_UMASK="022" File creation mask for this service. SERVICE_RUN_NICE_LEVEL="0" Scheduling priority for this service.