ctlinnd - control the InterNetNews daemon
ctlinnd [ -h ] [ -s ] [ -t
timeout ] command [ argument... ]
Ctlinnd sends a message to the control channel of
innd(8), the InterNetNews server.
In the normal mode of behavior, the message is sent to the server,
which then performs the requested action and sends back a reply with a text
message and the exit code for ctlinnd. If the server successfully
performed the command, ctlinnd will exit with a status of zero and
print the reply on standard output. If the server could not perform the
command (for example, it was told to remove a newsgroup that does not
exist), it will direct ctlinnd to exit with a status of one. The
``shutdown,'' ``xabort,'' and ``xexec'' commands do not generate a reply;
ctlinnd will always exit silently with a status of zero.
- -s
- If the ``-s'' flag is used, then no message will be printed if the
command was successful.
- -t
- The ``-t'' flag can be used to specify how long to wait for the
reply from the server. The timeout value specifies the number of seconds
to wait. A value of zero waits forever, and a value less than zero
indicates that no reply is needed. When waiting for a reply,
ctlinnd will try every two minutes to see if the server is still
running, so it is unlikely that ``-t0'' will hang. The default is
``-t0.''
- -h
- To see a command summary, use the ``-h'' flag. If a command is
included when ctlinnd is invoked with the ``-h'' flag, then
only the usage for that command will be given.
If a large number of groups are going to be created or deleted at
once, it may be more efficient to ``pause'' or ``throttle'' the server and
edit the active file directly.
The complete list of commands follows. Note that all commands have
a fixed number of arguments. If a parameter can be an empty string, then it
is necessary to specify it as two adjacent quotes, like "".
- addhist
<Message-ID> arr exp post paths
- Add an entry to the history database. This directs the server to create a
history line for Message-ID. The angle brackets are optional.
Arr, exp, and post specify when the article arrived,
what its expiration date is, and when it was posted. All three values are
a number indicating the number of seconds since the epoch. If the article
does not have an Expires header, then exp should be zero.
Paths is the pathname within the news spool directory where the
article is filed. If the article is cross-posted, then the names should be
separated by whitespace and the paths argument should be inside
double quotes. If the server is paused or throttled, this command causes
it to briefly open the history database.
- allow
reason
- Remote connections are allowed. The reason must be the same text
given with an earlier ``reject'' command, or an empty string.
- begin
site
- Begin feeding site. This will cause the server to rescan the
newsfeeds(5) file to find the specified site and set up a newsfeed
for it. If the site already exists, a ``drop'' is done first. This command
is forwarded; see below.
- cancel
<Message-ID>
- Remove the article with the specified Message-ID from the local system.
This does not generate a cancel message. The angle brackets are
optional. If the server is paused or throttled, this command causes it to
briefly open the history database.
- changegroup
group rest
- The newsgroup group is changed so that its fourth field in the
active file becomes the value specified by the rest
parameter. This may be used to make an existing group moderated or
unmoderated, for example.
- checkfile
- Check the syntax of the newsfeeds file, and display a message if
any errors are found. The details of the errors are reported to
syslog(3).
- drop
site
- Flush and drop site from the server's list of active feeds. This
command is forwarded; see below.
- feedinfo
site
- Print detailed information about the state of the feed to site or
more brief status of all feeds if site is an empty string.
- perl
flag
- Enable or disable perl news filtering. If flag starts with the
letter ``y'' then filtering is enabled. If it starts with ``n'', then
filtering is disabled.
- feedinfo
site
- Print detailed information about the state of the feed to site or
more brief status of all feeds if site is an empty string.
- flush
site
- Flush the buffer for the specified site. The actions taken depend on the
type of feed the site receives; see newsfeeds(5). This is useful
when the site is fed by a file and batching is going to start. If
site is an empty string, then all sites are flushed and the
active file and history databases are also written out. This
command is forwarded; see below.
- flushlogs
- Close the log and error log files and rename them to have a .old
extension. The history database and active file are also written
out.
- go reason
- Re-open the history database and start accepting articles after a
``pause'' or ``throttle'' command. The reason must either be an
empty string or match the text that was given in the earlier ``pause'' or
``throttle'' command. If a ``reject'' command was done, this will also do
an ``allow'' command if the reason matches the text that was given
in the ``reject.'' If a ``reserve'' command was done, this will also clear
the reservation if the reason matches the text that was given in
the ``reserve.'' Note that if only the history database has changed while
the server is paused or throttled, it is not necessary to send it a
``reload'' command before sending it a ``go'' command. If the server
throttled itself because it accumulated too many I/O errors, this command
will reset the error count. If the server was not started with the
``-ny'' flag, then this command also does a ``readers'' command
with ``yes'' as the flag and reason as the text.
- hangup
channel
- Close the socket on the specified incoming channel. This is useful when an
incoming connection appears to be hung.
- help
[command]
- Print a command summary for all commands, or just command if
specified.
- logmode
- Cause the server to log its current operating mode to syslog.
- mode
- Print the server's operating mode as a multi-line summary of the
parameters and operating state.
- name
nnn
- Print the name of channel number nnn or of all channels if it is an
empty string.
- newgroup
group rest creator
- Create the specified newsgroup. The rest parameter should be the
fourth field as described in active(5); if it is not an equal sign,
only the first letter is used. The creator should be the name of
the person creating the group. If the newsgroup already exists, this is
equivalent to the ``changegroup'' command. This is the only command that
has defaults. The creator can be omitted and will default to the
empty string, and the rest parameter can be omitted and will
default to ``y''. This command can be done while the server is paused or
throttled; it will update its internal state when a ``go'' command is
sent. This command updates the active.times (see active(5))
file.
- param letter
value
- Change the command-line parameters of the server. The combination of
defaults make it possible to use the text of the Control header directly.
Letter is the innd command-line option to set, and
value is the new value. For example, ``i 5'' directs the server to
allow only five incoming connections. To enable or disable the action of
the ``-n'' flag, use the letter ``y'' or ``n'', respectively, for
the value.
- pause
reason
- Pause the server so that no incoming articles are accepted. No existing
connections are closed, but the history database is closed. This command
should be used for short-term locks, such as when replacing the history
files. If the server was not started with the ``-ny'' flag, then
this command also does a ``readers'' command with ``no'' as the flag and
reason as the text.
- readers flag
text
- Allow or disallow newsreaders. If flag starts with the letter ``n''
then newsreading is disallowed, by causing the server to pass the
text as the value of the nnrpd(8) ``-r'' flag. If
flag starts with the letter ``y'' and text is either an
empty string, or the same string that was used when newsreading was
disallowed, then newsreading will be allowed.
- reject
reason
- Remote connections (those that would not be handed off to nnrpd)
are rejected, with reason given as the explanation.
- reload what
reason
- The server updates its in-memory copies of various configuration files.
What identifies what should be reloaded. If it is an empty string
or the word ``all'' then everything is reloaded; if it is the word
``history'' then the history database is closed and opened, if it is the
word ``hosts.nntp'' then the hosts.nntp(5) file is reloaded; if it
is the word ``active'' or ``newsfeeds'' then both the active and
newsfeeds files are reloaded; if it is the word ``overview.fmt''
then the overview.fmt(5) file is reloaded. If it is the word
``filter.perl'' then the filter_innd.pl file is reloaded. If a Perl
procedure named ``filter_before_reload'' exists, it will be called prior
to rereading filter.tcl. If a Perl procedure named
``filter_after_reload'' exists, it will be called after filter.pl
has been reloaded. Reloading the Perl filter does not enable filtering if
it is disabled; use filter to do this. The reason is
reported to syslog. There is no way to reload the data
inn.conf(5) file; the server currently only uses the ``pathhost''
parameter, so this restriction should not be a problem.
- renumber
group
- Scan the spool directory for the specified newsgroup and update the
low-water mark in the active file. If group is an empty
string then all newsgroups are scanned.
- reserve
reason
- The next ``pause'' or ``throttle'' command must use reason as its
text. This ``reservation'' is cleared by giving an empty string for the
reason. This command is used by programs like expire(8) that
want to avoid running into other instances of each other.
- rmgroup
group
- Remove the specified newsgroup. This is done by editing the active
file. The spool directory is not touched, and any articles in the group
will be expired using the default expiration parameters. Unlike the
``newgroup'' command, this command does not update the active.times
file.
- send feed
text...
- The specified text is sent as a control line to the exploder
feed.
- shutdown
reason
- The server is shut down, with the specified reason recorded in the log and
sent to all open connections. It is a good idea to send a ``throttle''
command first.
- signal sig
site
- Signal sig is sent to the specified site, which must be a
channel or exploder feed. Sig can be a numeric signal number or the
word ``hup,'' ``int,'' or ``term''; case is not significant.
- throttle
reason
- Input is throttled so that all existing connections are closed and new
connections are rejected. The history database is closed. This should be
used for long-term locks, such as when expire is being run. If the
server was not started with the ``-ny'' flag, then this command also does
a ``readers'' command with ``no'' as the flag and reason as the
text.
- trace item
flag
- Tracing is turned on or off for the specified item. Flag
should start with the letter ``y'' or ``n'' to turn tracing on or off. If
item starts is a number, then tracing is set for the specified
innd channel, which must be for an incoming NNTP feed. If it starts
with the letter ``i'' then general innd tracing is turned on or
off. If it starts with the letter ``n'' then future nnrpd's will or
will not have the ``-t'' flag enabled, as appropriate.
- xabort
reason
- The server logs the specified reason and then invokes the
abort(3) routine.
- xexec
path
- The server gets ready to shut itself down, but instead of exiting it execs
the specified path with all of its original arguments. If
path is ``innd'' then /usr/sbin/innd is invoked; if it is
``inndstart'' then /usr/sbin/inndstart is invoked; if it is an
empty string, it will invoke the appropriate program depending on whether
or not it was started with the ``-p'' flag; any other value is an
error.
In addition to being acted upon within the server, certain
commands can be forwarded to the appropriate child process. If the site
receiving the command is an exploder (such as buffchan(8)) or it is a
funnel that feeds into an exploder, then the command can be forwarded. In
this case, the server will send a command line to the exploder that consists
of the ctlinnd command name. If the site funnels into an exploder
that has an asterisk (``*'') in its ``W'' flag (see newsfeed(5)),
then the site name will be appended to the command; otherwise no argument is
appended.
Ctlinnd uses the inndcomm(3) library, and is
therefore limited to server replies no larger than 4k.
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews.
This is revision 1.39, dated 1996/10/29.