NAME

cgrulesengd - control group rules daemon

SYNOPSIS

cgrulesengd [options]

DESCRIPTION

cgrulesengd is a daemon, which distributes processes to control groups. When any process changes its effective UID or GID, cgrulesengd inspects the list of rules loaded from the cgrules.conf file and files in cgrules.d (see cgrules.d (5) for potential conflicts) directory and moves the process to the appropriate control group.

The list of rules is read during the daemon startup and cached in the daemon's memory. The daemon reloads the list of rules when it receives SIGUSR2 signal. The daemon reloads the list of templates when it receives SIGUSR1 signal.

The daemon opens a standard unix socket to receive 'sticky' requests from cgexec.

OPTIONS

-h|--help

Display help.

-f <path>|--logfile=<path>

Write log messages to the given log file. When '-' is used as <path>, log messages are written to the standard output. If '-f' and '-s' are used together, the logs are sent to both destinations.

-s[facility]|--syslog=[facility]

Write log messages to syslog. The default facility is DAEMON. If '-f' and '-s' are used together, the logs are sent to both destinations.

-n|--nodaemon

Don't fork the daemon, stay in the foreground.

-v|--verbose

Display more log messages. This option can be used three times to enable more verbose log messages.

-q|--quiet

Display less log messages.

-Q|--nolog

Disable logging.

-d|--debug

Equivalent to '-nvvvf -', i.e. don't fork the daemon, display all log messages and write them to the standard output.

-u <user>|--socket-user=<user>

-g <group>|--socket-group=<group> Set the owner of cgrulesengd socket. Assumes that cgexec runs with proper suid permissions so it can write to the socket when cgexec --sticky is used.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

CGROUP_LOGLEVEL

controls verbosity of the tool. Allowed values are DEBUG, INFO, WARNING or ERROR.

FILES

/etc/cgrules.conf

default libcgroup configuration file

/etc/cgrules.d

default libcgroup configuration files directory

/etc/cgconfig.conf

default templates file

/etc/cgconfig.d

default templates directory

SEE ALSO

cgrules.conf (5), cgrules.d (5)