
Base System Configuration
# P0602477 Ver: 3.1.11 Page 97
Example: gen.cfg
$3
#
# Example gen.cfg file.
#
# NAME NODE PORT is-VOS-CLASS PRI COMMAND LINE
#
alarmd - - 1 0 alarmd
alarmf - - 1 0 alarmf
configd - - 1 0 configd
conout - - 1 0 conout
rpc.riod - - 0 0 rpc.riod
nriod - - 1 0 nriod
#screendaemon - - 0 0 screendaemon
consoled - - 0 0 consoled
pmgr - - 1 0 pmgr
#vsupd - - 0 0 vsupd
#periweb - - 0 0 periweb
#proxy - - 0 0 "proxy -S ccss
-L cons -l info -k 10 -n"
Field Name Description
NAME Shorthand notation by which that process is known to SRP, vsh,
and any other process that attempts to connect to it by name
(essentially the process' well-known system name).
NODE Node name the process is running on. A dash (-) indicates the
local node.
PORT Specifies the well-known port the process uses for IPC
communication with other processes. If a dash is present, it
indicates that the system fills in the port value at run time. A static
port number only needs to be assigned for those processes that do
not register with SRP, and must not conflict with the port numbers
configured in the Solaris /etc/services file.
is-VOS-CLASS Indicates whether or not the process uses IPC (1 is yes, 0 is no). By
default, any processes listed in older versions of gen.cfg are
classified as not using IPC (set to 0).
PRI Real-time (RT) priority. This field is currently not used on Windows.
A 0 indicates that the process should be run under the time-sharing
priority class.
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