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Hi Derek, Thanks for the tips. I'll update the script and test. Chris On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 3:20 PM, Derek Martin <invalid-yPs96gJSFQo51KKgMmcfiw at public.gmane.org> wrote: > On Thu, Jun 03, 2010 at 02:56:02PM -0400, Chris O'Connell wrote: > > root at SJ-MA-LX-Nagios:~# cat /etc/init.d/mysqld > > sudo mkdir /var/run/mysqld > > sudo chmod 777 /var/run/mysqld > > sudo /usr/sbin/mysqld & > > Using sudo is not required here. Things started by init run as root. > You probably also don't want it to be 777, as that means anyone can > write and delete files in that directory. I don't believe you need to > start it in the background either; most system daemons background > themselves. I'm not 100% sure mysqld does, but I'd be more than a > little surprised if it didn't. > > > when I manually evoke the script all works without a problem. Without > the > > script things don't work too well. > > I take it you installed mysql from source? The deb package does all > this for you, of course... > > > How can I get the script to run at boot? I've created a symbolic link in > > rc3-rc5.d. > > The symlink need to be named in a specific way. Specifically, it > needs to start with the letter 'S' (it must be capital) and a 2-digit > number that indicates the order you want it to start relative to the > other services. Usually services which are not required to support > the proper running of the OS itself are given a relatively high > number, say in the 80's or 90's. So, for example, you might create it > as S90mysqld in /etc/rcX.d, where X={1,2,3}. > > -- > Derek D. Martin http://www.pizzashack.org/ GPG Key ID: 0xDFBEAD02 > -=-=-=-=- > This message is posted from an invalid address. Replying to it will result > in > undeliverable mail due to spam prevention. Sorry for the inconvenience. > >
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