syseventadm(1M) System Administration Commands syseventadm(1M)NAMEsyseventadm - sysevent event specification administration
SYNOPSISsyseventadm add [-R rootdir] [-v vendor] [-p publisher] [-c class] [-s
subclass] [-u username] path [args]
syseventadm remove [-R rootdir] [-v vendor] [-p publisher] [-c class]
[-s subclass] [-u username] [path [args]]
syseventadm list [-R rootdir] [-v vendor] [-p publisher] [-c class] [-s
subclass] [-u username] [path [args]]
syseventadm restart
DESCRIPTION
The syseventadm command is an administrative front-end to add, remove
and list sysevent event handlers. You can also restart the sysevent
daemon by use of the restart command. syseventadm can only be run by
root.
The syseventadm add command adds a handler for a sysevent event speci‐
fied by at least one of vendor, publisher or class. If class is speci‐
fied, it may be qualified with a sub-class. Only the values specified
for vendor, publisher, class and sub-class when adding the handler are
matched against sysevent events to determine if the specification
matches the event and the handler should be run. path is the full path‐
name of the command to be run in response to matching events, with
optional arguments (args). If username is specified, the command is
invoked as user username, otherwise as root.
The syseventadm remove command removes handlers for matching sysevent
event specifications. Event specifications may be matched by specifying
at least one of vendor, publisher, class, username or path. If class is
specified, it may be qualified with a sub-class. Any of vendor, pub‐
lisher, class, sub-class, username, path or args not specified match
the corresponding fields of all events. Handlers for all matching spec‐
ifications are removed.
The syseventadm list command lists the handlers for matching sysevent
event specifications using the same match criteria as the remove com‐
mand but without the requirement that at least one of vendor, pub‐
lisher, class, username or path be specified. With no match criteria,
all specifications are listed. The list command output format is: [ven‐
dor=vendor] [publisher=publisher] [class=class] [subclass=subclass]
[username=username] path [args] where each of class, sub-class, vendor,
publisher and username is listed only if part of the match criteria for
the listed specification.
The syseventadm restart command informs the syseventd daemon to reread
the sysevent registry after a change has been made by adding or remov‐
ing one or more sysevent handler specifications.
Argument Macro Substitution
The sysevent handling facility provides extensive macro capability for
constructing the command line arguments to be executed in response to
an event. Macro expansion applies only to the command line args speci‐
fied for an event handler, with macros expanded with data from the
event itself. Pre-defined macros are provided for the event class, sub‐
class, publisher and vendor information. Macros not matching one of the
pre-defined macro names cause the attribute list attached to the event
to be searched for an attribute of that name, with the value of the
matching attribute substituted on the command line.
Macros are introduced by the $ character, with the macro name being the
following token separated by a <SPACE> or <TAB> character. If the macro
name is embedded in text, it may be delineated by ${ and }. A \ before
the $ causes macro expansion not to occur.
$class The class string defining the event
$publisher The publisher string defining the event
$sequence The sequence number of the event.
$subclass The subclass string defining the event
$timestamp The timestamp of the event.
$vendor The vendor string defining the event
Macro names other than those pre-defined are compared against the
attribute list provided with the event. An attribute with name matching
the macro name causes the value of the attribute to be substituted as
ASCII text on the generated command line.
Use of a macro for which no attribute with that name is defined, or for
which multiple attributes with that name are provided, cause an error
and the command is not invoked.
Attributes with signed data types (DATA_TYPE_INT16, DATA_TYPE_INT32 and
DATA_TYPE_INT64) are expanded as decimal digits.
Attributes with unsigned data types (DATA_TYPE_BYTE, DATA_TYPE_UINT16,
DATA_TYPE_UINT32, DATA_TYPE_UINT64 and DATA_TYPE_HTTIME) are expanded
as hexadecimal digits with a 0x prefix.
Attributes with string data type (DATA_TYPE_STRING) are expanded with
the string data. The data is not quoted. If if it desired that the
quoted strings be generated on the command line, put quotes around the
macro call in the arguments.
Array types are expanded with each element expanded as defined for that
scalar type, with a space separating each element substitution.
OPTIONS
The add, list and remove subcommands support the following options:
-c class Specify the event class, class.
-p publisher Specify the event publisher, publisher.
-R rootdir Specify an alternate root path, rootdir.
Note - The root file system of any non-global zones
must not be referenced with the -R option.
Doing so might damage the global zone's file
system, might compromise the security of the
global zone, and might damage the non-global
zone's file system. See zones(5).
-s subclass Specify the event subclass, subclass.
-u username Specify the username (username) to invoke the command.
-v vendor Specify the vendor (vendor) that defines the event.
Events defined by third-party software should specify
the company's stock symbol as vendor. Sun-defined
events use SUNW.
OPERANDS
The add, list and remove subcommands support the following options:
args Command arguments
path Full path of command to be run in response to
event
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Adding an Event Handler
The following example adds an event handler for an event defined by
vendor MYCO ("My Company"), class EC_ENV and sub-class ESC_ENV_TEMP.
The command to be run is /opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp, with arguments
being the class name, sub-class name and pathname derived from the
event attributes. The $ characters are preceded by a backslash to cir‐
cumvent shell interpretation. There is no need to restart the service
after the change since the registry is maintained on $ALTROOT.
# syseventadm add -R LTROOT -v MYCO -c EC_ENV -s ESC_ENV_TEMP \
/opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp \$class \$subclass \$pathname
Note the caveat on the use of the -R option in the description of that
option, above.
Example 2: Removing an Event Handler
The following example removes the event handler added in Example 1.
# syseventadm remove -R LTROOT -v MYCO -c EC_ENV -s ESC_ENV_TEMP \
/opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp class} subclass} pathname}
Note the caveat on the use of the -R option in the description of that
option, above.
Example 3: Listing Event Handlers
The following example lists all event handlers for events of class
EC_ENV, subclass ESC_ENV_TEMP, as defined by vendor MYCO:
# syseventadm list -v MYCO -c EC_ENV -s ESC_ENV_TEMP \
vendor=MYCO class=EC_ENV subclass=ESC_ENV_TEMP \
/opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp \${class} \${subclass} \${pathname}
Example 4: Listing Event Handlers
The following example lists all event handlers defined by vendor VRTS.
# syseventadm list -v VRTS
Example 5: Removing Event Handlers
The following example removes all event handlers defined by vendor
VRTS, and restarts service.
# syseventadm remove -v VRTS
# syseventadm restart
Example 6: Listing All Event Handlers Specified to Run a Command
The following example lists all event handlers specified to run the
command /opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp:
# syseventadm list /opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp
Example 7: Removing Event Handlers and Restarting Service
The following example removes all event handlers specified to run the
command /opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp, and restarts service:
# syseventadm remove /opt/MYCOenv/bin/ec_env_temp
# syseventadm restart
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
1 No matching event specification found (remove or list commands
only).
2 Incorrect command usage.
3 Permission denied.
4 Command failed.
5 Out of memory.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │SUNWcsu │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOsyseventd(1M), sysevent_post_event(3SYSEVENT), attributes(5),
ddi_log_sysevent(9F)NOTES
To avoid upgrade problems, packages delivering a sysevent event handler
should install the event handler by running syseventadm from the pack‐
age's postinstall script. The event handler can then be removed by run‐
ning syseventadm from the package's preremove script using the same
arguments as when added.
SunOS 5.10 28 Sep 2005 syseventadm(1M)