OpenRC is an init system and service manager used by some Linux distributions, such as Alpine Linux and Gentoo. It is designed to be lightweight, fast, and simple, while still providing powerful management of system services.
One of the command-line tools provided by OpenRC is rc-service. This tool allows users to locate and manage OpenRC services, including starting, stopping, restarting, and checking the status of services.
rc-service takes two arguments: the first is the name of the service, and the second is the action to be performed on that service. For example, to start the sshd service, you can use the command rc-service sshd start.
It’s worth noting that the rc-service tool is specific to OpenRC and is not available on other init systems, such as systemd or Upstart. If you’re using OpenRC, however, rc-service can be a powerful tool for managing your system services.
rc-service Command Examples
1. Show a service’s status:
# rc-service service_name status
2. Start a service:
# sudo rc-service service_name start
3. Stop a service:
# sudo rc-service service_name stop
4. Restart a service:
# sudo rc-service service_name restart
5. Simulate running a service’s custom command:
# sudo rc-service --dry-run service_name command_name
6. Actually run a service’s custom command:
# sudo rc-service service_name command_name
7. Resolve the location of a service definition on disk:
# sudo rc-service --resolve service_name