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4.4 Starting slapdOnce the final tweaks have been added to the configuration file, the next step is to start the slapd daemon by executing the following command as root: root# /usr/local/libexec/slapd Use the ps command to verify that slapd is running. On a Linux system, the output should appear similar to: $ ps -ef | grep slapd root 8235 1 0 12:37 ? 00:00:00 /usr/local/libexec/slapd root 8241 8235 0 12:37 ? 00:00:00 /usr/local/libexec/slapd root 8242 8241 0 12:37 ? 00:00:00 /usr/local/libexec/slapd On Linux and IRIX, multiple threads of a process will show up as individual entries in the output from ps. On Solaris, slapd will be displayed as a single process. Stopping the OpenLDAP server requires that the daemon have a chance to flush modified directory data to disk. The best way to do this is to send the parent slapd process an INT signal, as shown here (the pidfile location was defined in the server's configuration file): root# kill -INT 'cat /var/run/slapd.pid' Shutting down slapd by more drastic means, such as kill -9, can result in data corruption and should be avoided at all costs. In the absence of any command-line options, slapd's behavior is governed by compile-time defaults or options defined in the slapd.conf file. At times, it is necessary to override some of these settings via the command line. Table 4-1 lists the available slapd options.
Of course, starting slapd from the command line is something you do only while testing. In practice, it would be started by one of the system's boot time initialization scripts�either rc.local for BSD systems, or one of the /etc/rc.d/rc?.d/ (or /etc/init.d/) scripts for System V hosts. You should refer to the init(8) manpage for a brief description of run levels and which levels are used (and for what functions) on your system. On most Linux systems, the slapd daemon should be launched at run levels 3 and 5. Run level 5 is basically the same as run level 3 with the addition of X11. |
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