RC.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual RC.CONF(5)NAMErc.conf — system startup configuration file
DESCRIPTION
The rc.conf file specifies which services are enabled during system
startup by the startup scripts invoked by /etc/rc (see rc(8)), and the
shutdown scripts invoked by /etc/rc.shutdown. The rc.conf file is a
shell script that is sourced by rc(8), meaning that rc.conf must contain
valid shell commands.
Listed below are the standard rc.conf variables that may be set, the val‐
ues to which each may be set, a brief description of what each variable
does, and a reference to relevant manual pages. Third party packages may
test for additional variables.
By default, rc.conf reads /etc/defaults/rc.conf (if it is readable) to
obtain default values for various variables, and the end-user may over‐
ride these by appending appropriate entries to the end of rc.conf.
rc.d(8) scripts that use load_rc_config from rc.subr(8) also support
sourcing an optional end-user provided per-script override file
/etc/rc.conf.d/service, (where service is the contents of the name vari‐
able in the rc.d(8) script). This may contain variable overrides,
including allowing the end-user to override various run_rc_command
rc.d(8) control variables, and thus changing the operation of the script
without requiring editing of the script.
Variable naming conventions and data types
Most variables are one of two types: enabling variables or flags vari‐
ables. Enabling variables, such as inetd, are generally named after the
program or the system they enable, and have boolean values (specified
using ‘YES’, ‘TRUE’, ‘ON’ or ‘1’ for true, and ‘NO’, ‘FALSE’, ‘OFF’ or
‘0’ for false, with the values being case insensitive). Flags variables,
such as inetd_flags have the same name with "_flags" appended, and deter‐
mine what arguments are passed to the program if it is enabled.
If a variable that rc(8) expects to be set is not set, or the value is
not one of the allowed values, a warning will be printed.
Overall control
do_rcshutdown Boolean value. If false, shutdown(8) will not run
/etc/rc.shutdown.
rcshutdown_rcorder_flags
A string. Extra arguments to the rcorder(8) run by
/etc/rc.shutdown.
rcshutdown_timeout
A number. If non-blank, use this as the number of sec‐
onds to run a watchdog timer for which will terminate
/etc/rc.shutdown if the timer expires before the shutdown
script completes.
rc_configured Boolean value. If false then the system will drop into
single-user mode during boot.
rc_fast_and_loose
If set to a non-empty string, each script in /etc/rc.d
will be executed in the current shell rather than a sub
shell. This may be faster on slow machines that have an
expensive fork(2) operation.
Note: Use this at your own risk! A rogue command or
script may inadvertently prevent boot to multi‐
user.
rc_rcorder_flags
A string. Extra arguments to the rcorder(8) run by
/etc/rc.
rc_directories A string. Space separated list of directories searched
for rc scripts. The default is /etc/rc.d. All directo‐
ries in rc_directories must be located in the root
filesystem, otherwise they will be silently skipped.
rc_silent Boolean value. If true then the usual output is sup‐
pressed, and rc(8) invokes the command specified in the
rc_silent_cmd variable once for each line of suppressed
output. The default value of rc_silent is set from the
AB_SILENT flag in the kernel's boothowto variable (see
boot(8), reboot(2)).
rc_silent_cmd A command to be executed once per line of suppressed out‐
put, when rc_silent is true. The default value of
rc_silent_cmd is “twiddle”, which will display a spinning
symbol instead of each line of output. Another useful
value is “:”, which will display nothing at all.
Basic network configuration
defaultroute A string. Default IPv4 network route. If empty or not
set, then the contents of /etc/mygate (if it exists) are
used.
defaultroute6 A string. Default IPv6 network route. If empty or not
set, then the contents of /etc/mygate6 (if it exists) are
used.
domainname A string. NIS (YP) domain of host. If empty or not set,
then the contents of /etc/defaultdomain (if it exists)
are used.
force_down_interfaces
A space separated list of interface names. These inter‐
faces will be configured down when going from multiuser
to singleuser mode or on system shutdown.
This is important for some stateful interfaces, for exam‐
ple PPP over ISDN connections that cost money by connec‐
tion time or PPPoE interfaces which have no direct means
of noticing “disconnect” events.
All active pppoe(4) and ippp(4) interfaces will be auto‐
matically added to this list.
hostname A string. Name of host. If empty or not set, then the
contents of /etc/myname (if it exists) are used.
Boottime file-system and swap configuration
critical_filesystems_local
A string. File systems mounted very early in the system
boot before networking services are available. Usually
/var is part of this, because it is needed by services
such as dhclient(8) which may be required to get the net‐
work operational. The default is “OPTIONAL:/var”, where
the “OPTIONAL:” prefix means that it's not an error if
the file system is not present in fstab(5).
critical_filesystems_remote
A string. File systems such as /usr that may require
network services to be available to mount, that must be
available early in the system boot for general services
to use. The default is “OPTIONAL:/usr”, where the
“OPTIONAL:” prefix means that it is not an error if the
file system is not present in fstab(5).
fsck_flags A string. A file system is checked with fsck(8) during
boot before mounting it. This option may be used to
override the default command-line options passed to the
fsck(8) program.
When set to -y, fsck(8) assumes yes as the answer to all
operator questions during file system checks. This might
be important with hosts where the administrator does not
have access to the console and an unsuccessful shutdown
must not make the host unbootable even if the file system
checks would fail in preen mode.
no_swap Boolean value. Should be true if you have deliberately
configured your system with no swap. If false and no
swap devices are configured, the system will warn you.
swapoff Boolean value. Remove block-type swap devices at shut‐
down time. Useful if swapping onto RAIDframe devices.
One-time actions to perform or programs to run on boot-up
accounting Boolean value. Enables process accounting with
accton(8). Requires /var/account/acct to exist.
ccd Boolean value. Configures concatenated disk devices
according to ccd.conf(5).
cgd Boolean value. Configures cryptographic disk devices.
Requires /etc/cgd/cgd.conf. See cgdconfig(8) for addi‐
tional details.
clear_tmp Boolean value. Clear /tmp after reboot.
dmesg Boolean value. Create /var/run/dmesg.boot from the out‐
put of dmesg(8). Passes dmesg_flags.
envsys Boolean value. Sets preferences for the environmental
systems framework, envsys(4). Requires /etc/envsys.conf,
which is described in envsys.conf(5).
gpio Boolean value. Configure gpio(4) devices. See
gpio.conf(5).
ldconfig Boolean value. Configures a.out(5) runtime link editor
directory cache.
mixerctl Boolean value. Read mixerctl.conf(5) for how to set
mixer values. List in mixerctl_mixers the devices whose
settings are to be saved at shutdown and restored at
start-up.
newsyslog Boolean value. Run newsyslog to trim logfiles before
syslogd starts. Intended for laptop users. Passes
newsyslog_flags.
per_user_tmp Boolean value. Enables a per-user /tmp directory.
per_user_tmp_dir can be used to override the default
location of the “real” temporary directories,
“/private/tmp”. See security(7) for additional details.
quota Boolean value. Checks and enables quotas by running
quotacheck(8) and quotaon(8).
raidframe Boolean value. Configures raid(4), RAIDframe disk
devices. See raidctl(8) for additional details.
rndctl Boolean value. Runs the rndctl(8) utility one or more
times according to the specification in rndctl_flags.
If rndctl_flags does not contain a semicolon (‘;’) then
it is expected to contain zero or more flags, followed by
one or more device or type names. The rndctl(8) command
will be executed once for each device or type name. If
the specified flags do not include any of -c, -C, -e, or
-E, then the flags -c and -e are added, to specify that
entropy from the relevant device or type should be both
collected and estimated. If the specified flags do not
include either of -d or -t, then the flag -d is added, to
specify that the non-flag arguments are device names, not
type names.
rndctl_flags may contain multiple semicolon-separated
segments, in which each segment contains flags and device
or type names as described above. This allows different
flags to be associated with different device or type
names. For example, given rndctl_flags="wd0 wd1; -t tty;
-c -t net", the following commands will be executed:
rndctl -c -e -d wd0; rndctl -c -e -d wd1; rndctl -c -e -t
tty; rndctl -c -t net.
rtclocaltime Boolean value. Sets the real time clock to local time by
adjusting the sysctl(7) value of kern.rtc_offset. The
offset from UTC is calculated automatically according to
the time zone information in the file /etc/localtime.
savecore Boolean value. Runs the savecore(8) utility. Passes
savecore_flags. The directory where crash dumps are
stored is specified by savecore_dir. The default setting
is “/var/crash”.
sysdb Boolean value. Builds various system databases, includ‐
ing /var/run/dev.cdb, /etc/spwd.db, /var/db/netgroup.db,
/var/db/services.cdb, and entries for utmp(5).
tpctl Boolean value. Run tpctl(8) to calibrate touch panel
device. Passes tpctl_flags.
update_motd Boolean value. Updates the NetBSD version string in the
/etc/motd file to reflect the version of the running ker‐
nel. See motd(5).
veriexec Boolean value. Load Veriexec fingerprints during
startup. Read veriexecctl(8) for more information.
virecover Boolean value. Send notification mail to users if any
recoverable files exist in /var/tmp/vi.recover. Read
virecover(8) for more information.
wdogctl Boolean value. Configures watchdog timers. Passes
wdogctl_flags. Refer to wdogctl(8) for information on
how to configure a timer.
System security setting
securelevel A number. The system securelevel is set to the specified
value early in the boot process, before any external
logins, or other programs that run users job, are
started. If set to nothing, the default action is taken,
as described in init(8) and secmodel_securelevel(9),
which contains definitive information about the system
securelevel. Note that setting securelevel to 0 in
rc.conf will actually result in the system booting with
securelevel set to 1, as init(8) will raise the level
when rc(8) completes.
permit_nonalpha
Allow passwords to include non-alpha characters, usually
to allow NIS/YP netgroups.
veriexec_strict
A number. Controls the strict level of Veriexec. Level
0 is learning mode, used when building the signatures
file. It will only output messages but will not enforce
anything. Level 1 will only prevent access to files with
a fingerprint mismatch. Level 2 will also deny writing
to and removing of monitored files, as well as enforce
access type (as specified in the signatures file). Level
3 will take a step further and prevent access to files
that are not monitored.
veriexec_verbose
A number. Controls the verbosity of Veriexec. Recom‐
mended operation is at level 0, verbose output (mostly
used when building the signatures file) is at level 1.
Level 2 is for debugging only and should not be used.
veriexec_flags A string. Flags to pass to the veriexecctl command.
Networking startup
altqd Boolean value. ALTQ configuration/monitoring daemon.
Passes altqd_flags.
auto_ifconfig Boolean value. Sets the net_interfaces variable (see
below) to the output of ifconfig(8) with the “-l” flag
and suppresses warnings about interfaces in this list
that do not have an ifconfig file or variable.
dhclient Boolean value. Set true to configure some or all network
interfaces using the ISC DHCP client. If you set
dhclient true, then /var must be in
critical_filesystems_local, or /var must be on the root
file system, or you must modify the dhclient_flags vari‐
able to direct the DHCP client to store the leases file
in some other directory on the root file system. You
must not provide ifconfig information or ifaliases infor‐
mation for any interface that is to be configured using
the DHCP client. Interface aliases can be set up in the
DHCP client configuration file if needed - see
dhclient.conf(5) for details.
Passes dhclient_flags to the DHCP client. See
dhclient(8) for complete documentation. If you wish to
configure all broadcast network interfaces using the DHCP
client, you can leave this blank. To configure only spe‐
cific interfaces, name the interfaces to be configured on
the command line.
If you must run the DHCP client before mounting critical
file systems, then you should specify an alternate loca‐
tion for the DHCP client's lease file in the
dhclient_flags variable - for example, "-lf
/tmp/dhclient.leases".
dhcpcd Boolean value. Set true to configure some or all network
interfaces using dhcpcd. If you set dhcpcd true, then
/var must be in critical_filesystems_local, or /var must
be on the root file system. If you need to restrict
dhcpcd to one or a number of interfaces, or need a sepa‐
rate configuration per interface, then this should be
done in the configuration file - see dhcpcd.conf(5) for
details.
dhcpcd_flags Passes dhcpcd_flags to dhcpcd. See dhcpcd(8) for com‐
plete documentation.
flushroutes Boolean value. Flushes the route table on networking
startup. Useful when coming up to multiuser mode after
going down to single-user mode.
ftp_proxy Boolean value. Runs ftp-proxy(8), the proxy daemon for
the Internet File Transfer Protocol.
hostapd Boolean value. Runs hostapd(8), the authenticator for
IEEE 802.11 networks.
ifaliases_* A string. List of ‘address netmask’ pairs to configure
additional network addresses for the given configured
interface “*” (e.g. ifaliases_le0). If netmask is “-”,
then use the default netmask for the interface.
ifaliases_* covers limited cases only and is considered
unrecommended. We recommend using ifconfig_nnX variables
or /etc/ifconfig.xxN files with multiple lines instead.
ifwatchd Boolean value. Monitor dynamic interfaces and perform
actions upon address changes. Passes ifwatchd_flags.
ip6mode A string. An IPv6 node can be a router (nodes that
forward packet for others) or a host (nodes that do not
forward). A host can be autoconfigured based on the
information advertised by adjacent IPv6 routers. By set‐
ting ip6mode to “router”, “host”, or “autohost”, you can
configure your node as a router, a non-autoconfigured
host, or an autoconfigured host. Invalid values will be
ignored, and the node will be configured as a non-auto‐
configured host. You may want to check rtsol and rtsold
as well, if you set the variable to “autohost”.
ip6uniquelocal Boolean value. If ip6mode is equal to “router”, and
ip6uniquelocal is false, a reject route will be installed
on boot to avoid misconfiguration relating to unique-
local addresses. If ip6uniquelocal is true, the reject
route won't be installed.
ipfilter Boolean value. Runs ipf(8) to load in packet filter
specifications from /etc/ipf.conf at network boot time,
before any interfaces are configured. Passes
ipfilter_flags. See ipf.conf(5).
ipfs Boolean value. Runs ipfs(8) to save and restore informa‐
tion for ipnat and ipfilter state tables. The informa‐
tion is stored in /var/db/ipf/ipstate.ipf and
/var/db/ipf/ipnat.ipf. Passes ipfs_flags.
ipmon Boolean value. Runs ipmon(8) to read ipf(8) packet log
information and log it to a file or the system log.
Passes ipmon_flags.
ipmon_flags A string. Specifies arguments to supply to ipmon(8).
Defaults to “-ns”. A typical example would be “-nD
/var/log/ipflog” to have ipmon(8) log directly to a file
bypassing syslogd(8). If the “-D” argument is used,
remember to modify /etc/newsyslog.conf accordingly; for
example:
/var/log/ipflog 640 10 100 * Z /var/run/ipmon.pid
ipnat Boolean value. Runs ipnat(8) to load in the IP network
address translation (NAT) rules from /etc/ipnat.conf at
network boot time, before any interfaces are configured.
See ipnat.conf(5).
ipsec Boolean value. Runs setkey(8) to load in IPsec manual
keys and policies from /etc/ipsec.conf at network boot
time, before any interfaces are configured.
net_interfaces A string. The list of network interfaces to be config‐
ured at boot time. For each interface "xxN", the system
first looks for ifconfig parameters in the variable
ifconfig_xxN, and then in the file /etc/ifconfig.xxN. If
auto_ifconfig is false, and neither the variable nor the
file is found, a warning is printed. Information in
either the variable or the file is parsed identically,
except that, if an ifconfig_xxN variable contains a sin‐
gle line with embedded semicolons, then the value is
split into multiple lines prior to further parsing,
treating the semicolon as a line separator.
One common case it to set the ifconfig_xxN variable to a
set of arguments to be passed to an ifconfig(8) command
after the interface name. Refer to ifconfig.if(5) for
more details on /etc/ifconfig.xxN files, and note that
the information there also applies to ifconfig_xxN vari‐
ables (after the variables are split into lines).
ntpdate Boolean value. Runs ntpdate(8) to set the system time
from one of the hosts in ntpdate_hosts. If ntpdate_hosts
is empty, it will attempt to find a list of hosts in
/etc/ntp.conf. Passes ntpdate_flags.
pf Boolean value. Enable pf(4) at network boot time: Load
the initial configuration pf.boot.conf(5) before the net‐
work is up. After the network has been configured, then
load the final ruleset pf.conf(5).
pf_rules A string. The path of the pf.conf(5) ruleset that will
be used when loading the final ruleset.
pflogd Boolean value. Run pflogd(8) for dumping packet filter
logging information to a file.
ppp_peers A string. If ppp_peers is not empty, then /etc/rc.d/ppp
will check each word in ppp_peers for a corresponding ppp
configuration file in /etc/ppp/peers and will call
pppd(8) with the “call peer” option.
racoon Boolean value. Runs racoon(8), the IKE (ISAKMP/Oakley)
key management daemon.
rtsol Boolean value. Run rtsol(8), router solicitation command
for IPv6 hosts. On nomadic hosts like notebook comput‐
ers, you may want to enable rtsold as well. Passes
rtsol_flags. This is only for autoconfigured IPv6 hosts,
so set ip6mode to “autohost” if you use it.
wpa_supplicant Boolean value. Run wpa_supplicant(8), WPA/802.11i Sup‐
plicant for wireless network devices. If you set
wpa_supplicant true, then /usr must be in
critical_filesystems_local, or /usr must be on the root
file system.
Daemons required by other daemons
inetd Boolean value. Runs the inetd(8) daemon to start network
server processes (as listed in /etc/inetd.conf) as neces‐
sary. Passes inetd_flags. The “-l” flag turns on lib‐
wrap connection logging.
rpcbind Boolean value. The rpcbind(8) daemon is required for any
rpc(3) services. These include NFS, NIS,
rpc.bootparamd(8), rpc.rstatd(8), rpc.rusersd(8), and
rpc.rwalld(8). Passes rpcbind_flags.
Commonly used daemons
cron Boolean value. Run cron(8).
ftpd Runs the ftpd(8) daemon and passes ftpd_flags.
httpd Boolean value. Runs the httpd(8) daemon and passes
httpd_flags.
httpd_wwwdir A string. The httpd(8) WWW root directory. Used only if
httpd is true. The default setting is “/var/www”.
httpd_wwwuser A string. If non-blank and httpd is true, run httpd(8)
and cause it to switch to the specified user after ini‐
tialization. It is preferred to httpd_user because
httpd(8) is requiring extra privileges to start listening
on default port 80. The default setting is “_httpd”.
lpd Boolean value. Runs lpd(8) and passes lpd_flags. The
“-l” flag will turn on extra logging.
mdnsd Boolean value. Runs mdnsd(8).
named Boolean value. Runs named(8) and passes named_flags.
named_chrootdir
A string. If non-blank and named is true, run named(8)
as the unprivileged user and group ‘named’, chroot(2)ed
to named_chrootdir. named_chrootdir/var/run/log will be
added to the list of log sockets that syslogd(8) listens
to.
ntpd Boolean value. Runs ntpd(8) and passes ntpd_flags.
ntpd_chrootdir A string. If non-blank and ntpd is true, run ntpd(8) as
the unprivileged user and group ‘ntpd’, chroot(2)ed to
ntpd_chrootdir. ntpd_chrootdir/var/run/log will be added
to the list of log sockets that syslogd(8) listens to.
This option requires that the kernel has
pseudo-device clockctl
compiled in, and that /dev/clockctl is present.
postfix Boolean value. Starts postfix(1) mail system.
sshd Boolean value. Runs sshd(8) and passes sshd_flags.
syslogd Boolean value. Runs syslogd(8) and passes syslogd_flags.
timed Boolean value. Runs timed(8) and passes timed_flags.
The “-M” option allows timed(8) to be a master time
source as well as a slave. If you are also running
ntpd(8), only one machine running both should have the
“-M” flag given to timed(8).
Routing daemons
mrouted Boolean value. Runs mrouted(8), the DVMRP multicast
routing protocol daemon. Passes mrouted_flags.
route6d Boolean value. Runs route6d(8), the RIPng routing proto‐
col daemon for IPv6. Passes route6d_flags.
routed Boolean value. Runs routed(8), the RIP routing protocol
daemon. Passes routed_flags.
rtsold Boolean value. Runs rtsold(8), the IPv6 router solicita‐
tion daemon. rtsold(8) periodically transmits router
solicitation packets to find IPv6 routers on the network.
This configuration is mainly for nomadic hosts like note‐
book computers. Stationary hosts should work fine with
just rtsol. Passes rtsold_flags. This is only for auto‐
configured IPv6 hosts, so set ip6mode to “autohost” if
you use it.
Daemons used to boot other hosts over a network
bootparamd Boolean value. Runs bootparamd(8), the boot parameter
server, with bootparamd_flags as options. Used to boot
NetBSD and SunOS 4.x systems.
dhcpd Boolean value. Runs dhcpd(8), the Dynamic Host Configu‐
ration Protocol (DHCP) daemon, for assigning IP addresses
to hosts and passing boot information. Passes
dhcpd_flags.
dhcrelay Boolean value. Runs dhcrelay(8). Passes dhcrelay_flags.
mopd Boolean value. Runs mopd(8), the DEC MOP protocol dae‐
mon; used for booting VAX and other DEC machines. Passes
mopd_flags.
ndbootd Boolean value. Runs ndbootd(8), the Sun Network Disk
(ND) Protocol server. Passes ndbootd_flags.
rarpd Boolean value. Runs rarpd(8), the reverse ARP daemon,
often used to boot NetBSD and Sun workstations. Passes
rarpd_flags.
rbootd Boolean value. Runs rbootd(8), the HP boot protocol dae‐
mon; used for booting HP workstations. Passes
rbootd_flags.
rtadvd Boolean value. Runs rtadvd(8), the IPv6 router adver‐
tisement daemon, which is used to advertise information
about the subnet to IPv6 end hosts. Passes rtadvd_flags.
This is only for IPv6 routers, so set ip6mode to “router”
if you use it.
X Window System daemons
xdm Boolean value. Runs the xdm(1) X display manager. These
X daemons are available only with the optional X distri‐
bution of NetBSD.
xfs Boolean value. Runs the xfs(1) X11 font server, which
supplies local X font files to X terminals.
NIS (YP) daemons
ypbind Boolean value. Runs ypbind(8), which lets NIS (YP)
clients use information from a NIS server. Passes
ypbind_flags.
yppasswdd Boolean value. Runs yppasswdd(8), which allows remote
NIS users to update password on master server. Passes
yppasswdd_flags.
ypserv Boolean value. Runs ypserv(8), the NIS (YP) server for
distributing information from certain files in /etc.
Passes ypserv_flags. The “-d” flag causes it to use DNS
for lookups in /etc/hosts that fail.
NFS daemons and parameters
amd Boolean value. Runs amd(8), the automounter daemon,
which automatically mounts NFS file systems whenever a
file or directory within that file system is accessed.
Passes amd_flags.
amd_dir A string. The amd(8) mount directory. Used only if amd
is true.
lockd Boolean value. Runs rpc.lockd(8) if nfs_server and/or
nfs_client are true. Passes lockd_flags.
mountd Boolean value. Runs mountd(8) and passes mountd_flags.
nfs_client Boolean value. The number of local NFS asynchronous I/O
server is now controlled via sysctl(8).
nfs_server Boolean value. Sets up a host to be a NFS server by run‐
ning nfsd(8) and passing nfsd_flags.
statd Boolean value. Runs rpc.statd(8), a status monitoring
daemon used when rpc.lockd(8) is running, if nfs_server
and/or nfs_client are true. Passes statd_flags.
Bluetooth support
bluetooth Boolean value. Configure Bluetooth support, comprising
the following tasks:
- attach serial Bluetooth controllers as listed in the
/etc/bluetooth/btdevctl.conf configuration file.
- enable Bluetooth controllers with useful defaults,
plus additional options as detailed below.
- optionally, start bthcid(8), the Bluetooth Link
Key/PIN Code manager, passing bthcid_flags.
- configure local Bluetooth drivers as listed in the
/etc/bluetooth/btdevctl.conf configuration file.
- optionally, start sdpd(8), the Service Discovery
server, passing sdpd_flags.
btconfig_devices
A string. An optional list of Bluetooth controllers to
configure.
btconfig_{dev} A string. Additional configuration options for specific
Bluetooth controllers.
btconfig_args A string. Additional configuration options for Bluetooth
controllers without specific options as above.
bthcid Boolean value. If set to false, disable starting the
Bluetooth Link Key/PIN Code manager.
sdpd Boolean value. If set to false, disable starting the
Bluetooth Service Discovery server.
Other daemons
identd Boolean value. Runs identd(8), the daemon for the user
identification protocol. Passes identd_flags.
iscsi_target Boolean value. Runs the server for iSCSI requests,
iscsi-target(8). Passes iscsi_target_flags.
isdnd Boolean value. Runs isdnd(8), the isdn4bsd ISDN connec‐
tion management daemon. Passes isdnd_flags.
isdn_autoupdown
Boolean value. Set all configured ISDN interfaces to
“up”. If isdn_interfaces is not blank, only the listed
interfaces will be modified. Used only if isdnd is true.
kdc Boolean value. Runs the kdc(8) Kerberos v4 and v5
server. This should be run on Kerberos master and slave
servers.
rwhod Boolean value. Runs rwhod(8) to support the rwho(1) and
ruptime(1) commands.
Hardware daemons
apmd Boolean value. Runs apmd(8) and passes apmd_flags.
irdaattach Boolean value. Runs irdaattach(8) and passes
irdaattach_flags.
moused Boolean value. Runs moused(8), to pass serial mouse data
to the wscons mouse mux. Passes moused_flags.
screenblank Boolean value. Runs screenblank(1) and passes
screenblank_flags.
wscons Boolean value. Configures the wscons(4) console driver,
from the configuration file /etc/wscons.conf.
wsmoused Boolean value. Runs wsmoused(8), to provide copy and
paste text support in wscons displays. Passes
wsmoused_flags.
FILES
/etc/rc.conf The file rc.conf resides in /etc.
/etc/defaults/rc.conf Default settings for rc.conf, sourced by rc.conf
before the end-user configuration section.
/etc/rc.conf.d/foo foo-specific rc.conf overrides.
SEE ALSOboot(8), rc(8), rc.d(8), rc.subr(8), rcorder(8)HISTORY
The rc.conf file appeared in NetBSD 1.3.
BSD June 1, 2012 BSD