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SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037). 2. Objectives. Describe the Linux Load ProcedureManage RunlevelsManage the KernelManage the GRUB Boot LoaderModify System Settings . SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037). 3. Describe the Linux Load Procedure. Objecti
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1. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) Chapter 5
Manage System Initialization
2. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 2 Objectives Describe the Linux Load Procedure
Manage Runlevels
Manage the Kernel
Manage the GRUB Boot Loader
Modify System Settings
3. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 3 Describe the Linux Load Procedure Objectives
BIOS and Boot Manager
Kernel
initrd and linuxrc
init
4. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 4 Describe the Linux Load Procedure (continued)
5. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 5 Describe the Linux Load Procedure (continued) BIOS and Boot Manager
Tasks performed by the BIOS
Power-on self-test
Initial detection and setup of hardware
Accessing bootable devices
BIOS also reads the MBR (Master Boot Record)
BIOS starts the boot manager
Using the code in the MBR
Boot manager (such as GRUB)
Loads the kernel and the initrd to memory and starts the kernel
6. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 6 Describe the Linux Load Procedure (continued) Kernel
Uncompresses itself
Organizes and takes control of the continued booting of the system
Checks and sets the console
Reads BIOS settings
Initializes basic hardware interfaces
Probes existing hardware and initialize it accordingly
Manages hardware access
Allocates CPU time and memory to programs
7. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 7 Describe the Linux Load Procedure (continued) initrd and linuxrc
Boot manager informs the kernel that an initrd exists
And where it is located in memory
If initrd exists, it is integrated into the kernel
Kernel decompresses the initrd
And mounts it as a temporary root file system
linuxrc
Loads modules required to mount root file system
May be dynamically linked
As soon as linuxrc finishes
initrd is unmounted and the boot process continues
8. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 8 Describe the Linux Load Procedure (continued) init
Boots the system with all its programs and configurations
init process has ID number of 1
/etc/inittab file
Configuration file
/etc/init.d/boot script
Controls the start of services
/etc/init.d/rc script
Uses configured runlevels to start services and daemons
9. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 9 Manage Runlevels Objectives
Runlevel Basics
How to Change the Runlevel at Boot
How to Manage Runlevels from the Command Line
How to Shut Down or Halt the System
How to Set Runlevels with YaST
10. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 10 Runlevel Basics What runlevels are
Various runlevels define the state of the system
init configuration file (/etc/inittab)
Determines what happens on individual runlevels
Syntax: id:rl:action:process
Standard entries parameters
initdefault
bootwait
wait
ctrlaltdel
respwan
11. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 11 Runlevel Basics (continued)
12. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 12 Runlevel Basics (continued) init scripts
Located in the directory /etc/init.d/
Scripts can be called up
Directly by init when you boot the system
Indirectly by init when you change the runlevel
Directly by the /etc/init.d/ script start or stop commands
Some of the most important script include
boot
boot.local
boot.setup
halt
rc
13. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 13 Runlevel Basics (continued)
14. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 14 Runlevel Basics (continued)
15. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 15 Runlevel Basics (continued) Runlevel symbolic links
Each runlevel has a subdirectory in /etc/init.d/
Types of files
Sxxservice
Kxxservice
Point to service scripts in /etc/init.d/
Some links point to the same script
16. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 16 Runlevel Basics (continued)
17. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 17 Runlevel Basics (continued)
18. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 18 Runlevel Basics (continued)
19. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 19 Runlevel Basics (continued) How init determines which services to start and stop
Script /etc/init.d/rc examines directories
/etc/init.d/rccurrentrl.d/ and /etc/init.d/rcnewrl.d
Options
Kxx link in /etc/init.d/rccurrentrl.d/ and Sxx link in /etc/init.d/rcnewrl.d/ for the same service
Script in /etc/init.d/ is not called at all
Kxx link in /etc/init.d/rccurrentrl.d/ and no Sxx link in /etc/init.d/rcnewrl.d/
Stop script in /etc/init.d/service
Sxx link in /etc/init.d/rcnewrl.d/ and no Kxx link in /etc/init.d/rccurrentrl.d/
Start script in /etc/init.d/service
20. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 20 Runlevel Basics (continued) Activate and deactivate services for a runlevel
Use command insserv or YaST
INIT INFO block at the beginning of script
Determines in which runlevel the service should start or stop
Used by insserv
Use insserv after editing the INIT INFO block
To create the needed links and renumber the existing ones as needed
Use /etc/init.d/service stop, and then insserv -r service
To remove all links for a service
21. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 21 How to Change the Runlevel at Boot The standard runlevel is 3 or 5
GRUP choices
Linux
Floppy
Failsafe
Entry Linux options
root
vga
runlevel
Example: root=/dev/hda4 vga=791 1
22. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 22 How to Manage Runlevels from the Command Line Change to another runlevel
Using command init
Stop the system
Entering init 0
Restart the system
Entering init 6
Ctrl + Alt + Backspace
Restarts the X Window system
Restart graphical system
Enter init 5
23. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 23 How to Shut Down or Halt the System System should always be shut down properly
Command shutdown
Controls the shutdown of the system
Informs all users that the system will be shut down
Does not allow other users to log in before it shuts down
24. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 24 How to Shut Down or Halt the System (continued)
25. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 25 How to Set Runlevels with YaST Steps
Start YaST Runlevel Editor module
Switch to the Expert mode
Select a new default runlevel (optional)
Select a service and runlevels associated with it
Select Start Now, Stop Now, or Refresh status (optional)
Enable, disable the service
26. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 26 How to Set Runlevels with YaST (continued)
27. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 27 How to Set Runlevels with YaST (continued)
28. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 28 Exercise 5-1 Manage Run Levels In this exercise you will manage run levels
29. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 29 Manage the Kernel Objectives
Kernel Module Basics
How to Find Hardware Driver Information
How to Manage Modules from the Command Line
modprobe Configuration File (/etc/modprobe.conf)
Kernel Module Loader (kmod)
30. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 30 Kernel Module Basics Kernel is installed in directory /boot/
Drivers can be compiled into the kernel
Or be loaded as kernel modules
Kernel modules are in lib/modules/version/kernel/
Files and directories related to the kernel
/boot/initrd
/boot/vmlinuz
/proc/sys/kernel/
/proc/version
/usr/src/linux/
31. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 31 How to Find Hardware Driver Information Command hwinfo
Detects the hardware of your system
Selects the drivers needed to run this hardware
Syntax
hwinfo --hardware_type
hwinfo --help (for a short introduction to the command)
32. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 32 Exercise 5-2 View Information about the Hardware System In this exercise, you do the following:
Part I: View General Information about the Hardware System
Part II: View Information about Specific Hardware
33. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 33 How to Manage Modules from the Command Line lsmod
Lists the currently loaded modules in the kernel
insmod module
Loads the indicated module into the kernel
rmmod module
Removes the indicated module from the kernel
modprobe module
Loads the indicated module into the kernel
Or removes it (with option -r)
34. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 34 How to Manage Modules from the Command Line (continued) depmod
Creates the file /lib/modules/version/modules.dep
modinfo option module
Displays information about the module indicated
35. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 35 modprobe Configuration File (/etc/modprobe.conf) /etc/modprobe.conf
Configuration file for the kernel modules
Command types
install
Lets modprobe execute commands when loading a specific module into the kernel
alias
Determine which kernel module will be loaded for a specific device file
options
Options for loading a module
36. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 36 Kernel Module Loader (kmod) kmod
Most elegant way to use modules
Performs background monitoring
Makes sure modules are loaded by modprobe
Activate kmod
Option Kernel module loader needs to be set to “y” (yes)
In the kernel configuration
kmod is not designed to unload modules automatically
37. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 37 Exercise 5-3 Manage the Linux Kernel In this exercise, you view information about your kernel, and load and unload kernel modules
38. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 38 Manage the GRUB Boot Loader Objectives
What a Boot Manager Is
Boot Managers in SUSE Linux
How to Start the GRUB Shell
How to Modify the GRUB Configuration File
How to Configure GRUB with YaST
39. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 39 What a Boot Manager Is Boot loader
Loads the operating system kernel
Which then loads the system
Locates the operating system files on the hard drive
And starts the operating system
Boot manager
Can handle several operating systems
Two-stage architecture
Stage 1: contains code to load stage 2
Stage 2: contains the actual boot manager
40. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 40 Boot Managers in SUSE Linux GRUB Boot Manager
Standard boot manager in SLES
GRUB features include
File system support
Interactive control
LILO Boot Manager
Configuration file is /etc/lilo.conf
Structure similar to GRUB configuration file
41. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 41 Boot Managers in SUSE Linux (continued) Map files, GRUB, and LILO
Kernel is a file within a file system on a partition
Concepts unknown to the BIOS
Maps
Note physical block numbers on disk that comprise logical files
BIOS loads all blocks listed in maps
LILO relies entirely on maps
GRUB tries to become independent from maps at an early stage
42. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 42 Boot Managers in SUSE Linux (continued) Additional information
Linux system
Manual pages and info file
README files
In the directory /usr/share/doc/packages/grub/
In the directory /usr/share/doc/packages/lilo/
Internet sites
www.gnu.org/software/grub/
43. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 43 How to Start the GRUB Shell From a running system
Enter command grub as root
Command find
Finds out which partition contains the kernel
Close GRUB shell by entering quit
From the boot prompt
From the graphical boot selection menu, press Esc
A text-based menu appears
Start the GRUB shell by typing c
44. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 44 How to Modify the GRUB Configuration File Edit file /boot/grub/menu.lst structure
File structure
General options
Options for various operating systems
That can be booted with the GRUB
45. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 45 How to Configure GRUB with YaST Steps
Start YaST Boot Loader Configuration module
Add, edit, or delete an option
Display and edit the configuration files (optional)
Select additional boot options (optional)
46. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 46 How to Configure GRUB with YaST (continued)
47. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 47 Exercise 5-4 Manage the Boot Loader In this exercise you do the following:
Part I: Pass Kernel Parameters to the Boot Loader
Part II: Configure Boot Managers
48. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 48 Modify System Settings Tasks involved
View and Change System Settings (/proc/sys/)
Modify Kernel and Hardware Parameters with Powertweak
Configure /etc/sysconfig/ Files with YaST
49. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 49 View and Change System Settings (/proc/sys/) Files in /proc/ and /proc/sys/ are kept in memory
Changes to these files are lost after a reboot
View the current configuration
Use cat and less to view files in /proc/sys/
Use sysctl to view modifiable values below /proc/sys/
Edit the current configuration
Use echo to edit individual configuration values
You can also use sysctl
Use sysctl to load and set kernel parameters
Execute script
Activate it by entering insserv –d boot.sysctl
50. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 50 Modify Kernel and Hardware Parameters with Powertweak Steps
Start YaST Powertweak Configuration module
Create the Powertweak configuration file
Find a parameter
Select or enter the setting
Find and configure other setting (optional)
Review and save the changes
51. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 51 Modify Kernel and Hardware Parameters with Powertweak (continued)
52. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 52 Modify Kernel and Hardware Parameters with Powertweak (continued)
53. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 53 Modify Kernel and Hardware Parameters with Powertweak (continued)
54. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 54 Modify Kernel and Hardware Parameters with Powertweak (continued)
55. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 55 Configure /etc/sysconfig/ Files with YaST Changes to system configuration with YaST happen in one of the following ways:
Direct modification of configuration files
YaST modifies the configuration files in /etc/sysconfig/
Directory /etc/sysconfig/
Saves majority of configuration settings for SLES
Edit these files by using
YaST modules
YaST module /etc/sysconfig Editor
56. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 56 Configure /etc/sysconfig/ Files with YaST (continued) Steps
Start YaST /etc/sysconfig Editor module
Find a setting
Select or enter a setting
Find and configure other settings
Select Confirm Each Activation Command
Review and save changes
57. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 57 Configure /etc/sysconfig/ Files with YaST (continued)
58. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 58 Configure /etc/sysconfig/ Files with YaST (continued)
59. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 59 Configure /etc/sysconfig/ Files with YaST (continued)
60. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 60 Exercise 5-5 Change the Power Setting with YaST In this exercise you will change the power setting of your SLES system using YaST
61. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 61 Summary The boot manager starts the Linux kernel
A Linux system is categorized using runlevels
init daemon
Loads and unloads daemons using its configuration file /etc/inittab
/etc/inittab file
Runs scripts in the /etc/init.d/rcrunlevel.d
View current runlevel
Using the runlevel command
62. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 62 Summary (continued) Start individual daemons
By running script in the /etc/init.d with start argument
Or by using the rcdaemonname start command
Device drivers are either
Compiled into the Linux kernel
Loaded into the kernel as modules
Linux kernel is loaded into memory during system initialization
By a boot loader or boot manager
63. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration (Course 3037) 63 Summary (continued) LILO
Traditional Linux boot manager
GRUB boot loader
Used by default in SLES
/etc/lilo.conf file
LILO configuration file
/proc/sys/ directory
Exists in memory
Contains information and settings for a running system