#!/bin/sh # /etc/rc.d/rc.ntop : start/stop/restart ntop # usage: ./rc.ntop { start | stop | restart } # Thanks to andarius for donating # time and the various cleanups in the script and the start|stop|restart # functions. NTOPUID=@NTOPUSER@ NTOPGID=@NTOPGROUP@ NTOPLOG=/var/log/ntop DATE=$(date +%a\ %b\ %d\ %T\ %Y) RETVAL=0 # Sanity Checking if [ ! -r "/var/lib/ntop/ntop_pw.db" ]; then echo "Can not read ntop password database. Exiting..." exit 1 fi ntop_start() { echo -n $"Starting ntop ... " if [ -r /var/run/ntop.pid ]; then if $(! /sbin/pidof ntop > /dev/null 2>&1 ) ; then echo "Removing an old /var/run/ntop.pid" rm -f /var/run/ntop.pid fi fi /usr/bin/ntop --w3c -u $NTOPUID -d >> $NTOPLOG 2>&1 RETVAL=$? if [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ]; then touch /var/lock/ntop sleep 2 echo "Done" else echo "Failed" fi return $RETVAL } ntop_stop() { echo -n $"Stopping ntop ... " RETVAL=$? if [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ]; then if [ -r /var/run/ntop.pid ]; then killall ntop # Give it some time to die gracefully for second in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ; do if $(! /sbin/pidof ntop > /dev/null 2>&1 ) ; then # ntop is a dirty little daemon: rm -f /var/run/ntop.pid break fi sleep 1 done if [ "$second" = "10" ]; then echo "\nWARNING: ntop did not exit!" sleep 10 else # Yes there are two spaces as this is the way ntop writes # their logfiles. echo "$DATE EXIT: ntop stopped by user: $USER (UID: $EUID)" >> $NTOPLOG echo "Done" fi fi rm -f /var/lock/ntop fi return $RETVAL } # Lets see how we are being called: case "$1" in start) ntop_start ;; stop) ntop_stop ;; restart|reload) ntop_stop # Takes a few to recover and be able to start again: sleep 10 ntop_start ;; *) echo "" echo "Usage: $(basename $0) {start | stop | restart }" RETVAL=1 esac exit $RETVAL #EOF