WATCHDOGD(8) | MidnightBSD System Manager's Manual | WATCHDOGD(8) |
watchdogd
—
watchdog daemon
watchdogd |
[-dnSw ] [--debug ]
[--softtimeout ]
[--softtimeout-action
action] [--pretimeout
timeout]
[--pretimeout-action action]
[-e cmd]
[-I file]
[-s sleep]
[-t timeout]
[-T script_timeout]
[-x exit_timeout] |
The watchdogd
utility interfaces with the
kernel's watchdog facility to ensure that the system is in a working state.
If watchdogd
is unable to interface with the kernel
over a specific timeout, the kernel will take actions to assist in debugging
or restarting the computer.
If -e
cmd is
specified, watchdogd
will attempt to execute this
command with system(3),
and only if the command returns with a zero exit code will the watchdog be
reset. If -e
cmd is not
specified, the daemon will perform a trivial file system check instead.
The -n
argument 'dry-run' will cause
watchdog not to arm the system watchdog and instead only run the watchdog
function and report on failures. This is useful for developing new watchdogd
scripts as the system will not reboot if there are problems with the
script.
The -s
sleep
argument can be used to control the sleep period between each execution of
the check and defaults to 10 seconds.
The -t
timeout
specifies the desired timeout period in seconds. The default timeout is 128
seconds.
One possible circumstance which will cause a watchdog timeout is
an interrupt storm. If this occurs, watchdogd
will
no longer execute and thus the kernel's watchdog routines will take action
after a configurable timeout.
The -T
script_timeout specifies the threshold (in seconds) at
which the watchdogd will complain that its script has run for too long. If
unset script_timeout defaults to the value specified
by the -s
sleep option.
The -x
exit_timeout
argument is the timeout period (in seconds) to leave in effect when the
program exits. Using -x
with a non-zero value
protects against lockup during a reboot by triggering a hardware reset if
the software reboot doesn't complete before the given timeout expires.
Upon receiving the SIGTERM
or
SIGINT
signals, watchdogd
will terminate, after first instructing the kernel to either disable the
timeout or reset it to the value given by -x
exit_timeout.
The watchdogd
utility recognizes the
following runtime options:
-I
filewatchdogd
utility in
the specified file.-d
--debug
watchdogd
will not fork into the background at
startup.-S
-w
--pretimeout
timeout--pretimeout-action
action--softtimeout
--softtimeout-action
actionThe following timeout actions are available via the
--pretimeout-action
and
--softtimeout-action
flags:
Actions can be combined in a comma separated list as so: log,printf which would both printf(9) and log(9) which will send messages both to dmesg(8) and the kernel log(4) device for syslogd(8).
This is a useful recipe for debugging
watchdogd
and your watchdog script.
(Note that ^C works oddly because
watchdogd
calls
system(3) so the first ^C
will terminate the "sleep" command.)
Explanation of options used:
watchdogd --debug -t 30 \ --softtimeout --softtimeout-action log,printf \ --pretimeout 15 --pretimeout-action log,printf \ -e 'sleep 60' -w
watchdogd -t 120 \ --pretimeout 60 --pretimeout-action log,printf,panic \ -e '/path/to/your/script 60' -w -T 15
The watchdogd
utility appeared in
FreeBSD 5.1.
The watchdogd
utility and manual page were
written by Sean Kelly
<smkelly@FreeBSD.org>
and Poul-Henning Kamp
<phk@FreeBSD.org>.
Some contributions made by Jeff Roberson <jeff@FreeBSD.org>.
The pretimeout and softtimeout action system was added by Alfred Perlstein <alfred@freebsd.org>.
May 11, 2015 | midnightbsd-3.1 |