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The Boot Procedure

Bootstrapping is the process of starting up a computer from a halted or powered-down condition. When the computer is switched on, it activates the memory-resident code which resides on the CPU board. The normal facilities of the operating system are not available at this stage and the computer must 'pull itself up by its own boot-straps' so to speak. This procedure therefore is often referred to as bootstrapping, also known as cold boot. Although the bootstrap procedure is very hardware dependent, it typically consists of the following steps:

Kernel

Most Unix systems implement a two-stage loading process. During the first stage, a small boot program is read into memory from a default or specified device. It is this program that reads in the kernel and relinquishes the control to it. The path to the kernel is vendor-dependent. For example, it is /vmunix on SunOS 4.x, Digital Unix and Ultrix, /kernel/unix on SunOS 5.x, /hp-ux on HP-UX, and /unix on IRIX and AIX systems.

One of the very first, probably the most difficult, tasks a system administrator must perform, is configuring the kernel. You'll read the details later in the sections dealing with the 'Operating System Installation'. Once the kernel is loaded, it remains in the memory during the running of the system and is usually run in a fixed amount of memory. When the kernel starts, it normally displays its size and the amount of physical memory remaining after the kernel is loaded. The kernel probes the bus to locate the devices specified during the configuration, and initializes the located devices (ignoring those that it can't contact). Any device not detected and initialized during the boot will not be accessible to system until it is properly connected and the system is rebooted.

System Processes

The kernel identifies the root, swap, and dump devices and then starts programs to schedule processes, manage physical memory and virtual memory, and the init process. BSD systems starts three initialization processes; swapper, init and pagedaemon. On the SVR4 systems the initialization processes include sched, init, and various memory handlers (except on Solaris).

sched

The real-time scheduler, sched, runs as process 0 on SVR5 systems. It can be used to set priority for real-time processes so that they can be given fast access to the kernel.

swapper

The swapper daemon runs as process 0 on BSD systems. It manages the physical memory by moving process from physical memory to swap space when more physical memory is needed.

Page Daemon

Various memory handlers run as process 2. When a page of virtual memory is accessed, the page table within the kernel is consulted and if necessary, the pagedaemon (SunOS 4.x) or pageout (SunOS 5.x) is used to move pages in and out of physical memory and to update page tables. Similar memory handlers exist on other SVR5 systems.

init

The last step in bootstrapping the kernel starts the /etc/init process. The init process runs as process 1 and always remains in the background when the system is running. If the system is brought up in a single user mode, init merely creates a shell on the system console (/dev/console) and waits for it to terminate before running other startup scripts.

Single User Mode

Single user shell is always Bourne shell (sh) and it runs as 'root'. It enables the system manager to perform various administrative functions, such as setting the date, checking the consistency of the file system, reconfiguring the list of on-line terminals, and so on. At this stage only the root partition is usually mounted. Other file systems will have to be mounted manually to use programs that do not reside on the root volume. The file system consistency check may be performed by the command fsck, usually found in the /etc directory.

Startup Scripts

The startup scripts are merely shell scripts, so init spawns a copy of sh to interpret them. The startup scripts are defined and organized differently on different systems. On BSD systems the startup scripts may be found in the /etc directory and their names begin with rc, e.g., /etc/rc.boot, /etc/rc.single, /etc/rc.local and so on. SVR5 systems define various run levels in which a specific set of processes are allowed to run. This set of processes is defined in the /etc/inittab file. Each line in the inittab file describes an action to take. The syntax of inittab entries is:

id:run-level:action:process

In general, the following tasks are performed in the startup scripts.


Terms used: boot, bootstrapping kernel, init,swap, virtual memory, run level.




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