revert "%s" addition in em_main.c, broke %D in log_file.
[exim.git] / src / src / eximon.src
... / ...
CommitLineData
1# Base source of start-up shell script for the Exim Monitor. Used to set the
2# required environment variables before running the program. Using script
3# rather than a configuration file means that computation can be done.
4# The build process concatenates on the front of this various settings from
5# os-specific files and from the user's configuration file.
6
7# Copyright (c) 2004 University of Cambridge.
8# See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution.
9
10# Except when they appear in comments, the following placeholders in this
11# source are replaced when it is turned into a runnable script:
12#
13# CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE
14# CONFIGURE_FILE
15# BIN_DIRECTORY
16# BASENAME_COMMAND
17# HOSTNAME_COMMAND
18# X11_LD_LIBRARY
19
20# PROCESSED_FLAG
21
22# See if caller wants to invoke gdb
23
24use_gdb=''
25
26case ${1:-foo} in
27 gdb*) use_gdb="$1"; shift ;;
28esac
29
30# Save arguments (can be the usual X parameters)
31
32cmd_args="$@"
33
34# See if this installation is using the esoteric "USE_NODE" feature of Exim,
35# in which it uses the host's name as a suffix for the configuration file name.
36
37if [ "CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE" = "yes" ]; then
38 hostsuffix=.`uname -n`
39fi
40
41# Now find the configuration file name. This has got complicated because
42# CONFIGURE_FILE may now be a list of files. The one that is used is the first
43# one that exists. Mimic the code in readconf.c by testing first for the
44# suffixed file in each case.
45
46set `awk -F: '{ for (i = 1; i <= NF; i++) print $i }' <<End
47CONFIGURE_FILE
48End
49`
50while [ "$config" = "" -a $# -gt 0 ] ; do
51 if [ -f "$1$hostsuffix" ] ; then
52 config="$1$hostsuffix"
53 elif [ -f "$1" ] ; then
54 config="$1"
55 fi
56 shift
57done
58
59# Determine where the spool directory is and whether there is any setting of
60# log_file_path. Search for an exim_path setting in the configure file;
61# otherwise use the bin directory. Call that version of Exim to find the spool
62# directory and the setting of log_file_path.
63
64config=${EXIMON_EXIM_CONFIG-$config}
65
66# Add code here to redefine "config" if an alternative configuration file
67# should be used in some circumstances. If you do that, you should also arrange
68# for the value to be set in EXIMON_EXIM_CONFIG, and to export that variable
69# into the environment. BEWARE: a tab character is needed in the command below.
70# It has had a nasty tendency to get lost in the past. Use a variable to hold a
71# space and a tab to keep the tab in one place.
72
73st=' '
74EXIM_PATH=`grep "^[$st]*exim_path" $config | sed "s/.*=[$st]*//"`
75if test "$EXIM_PATH" = ""; then EXIM_PATH=BIN_DIRECTORY/exim; fi
76
77SPOOL_DIRECTORY=`$EXIM_PATH -C $config -bP spool_directory | sed 's/.*=[ ]*//'`
78LOG_FILE_PATH=`$EXIM_PATH -C $config -bP log_file_path | sed 's/.*=[ ]*//'`
79
80# If log_file_path is "syslog" then logging is only to syslog, and the monitor
81# is unable to display a log tail unless EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH is set to tell
82# it where the log data is. Otherwise, remove any occurrences of
83# "syslog:" or ":syslog" (spaces allowed in various places) and look at the
84# remainder of the entry. If it's null, the default is "mainlog" in the
85# "log" directory in the spool directory. Otherwise, set the name from the
86# given path.
87
88if [ "$EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH" != "" ] ; then
89 LOG_FILE_NAME="$EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH"
90elif [ "$LOG_FILE_PATH" = "syslog" ] ; then
91 LOG_FILE_NAME=""
92 echo \*\*\*
93 echo Exim is using the syslog interface for its log data. If you redirect all
94 echo MAIL.INFO syslog messages into a separate file, you can point eximon at
95 echo that file with the EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH environment variable.
96 echo \*\*\*
97else
98 LOG_FILE_NAME=`echo $LOG_FILE_PATH | \
99 sed -e 's/ *: *syslog *: */:/' \
100 -e 's/ *: *syslog *$//' \
101 -e 's/^ *syslog *: *//' \
102 -e 's/%s/main/'`
103 if [ "$LOG_FILE_NAME" = "" ] ; then
104 LOG_FILE_NAME=$SPOOL_DIRECTORY/log/mainlog
105 fi
106fi
107
108# The basename and hostname commands vary from system to system
109
110basename=BASENAME_COMMAND
111hostname=HOSTNAME_COMMAND
112
113# SunOS5 is a pain in that they may be in one of two places. So is Linux
114# in the case of basename. Set up a general mechanism for searching for
115# them in several places.
116
117if [ "${basename}" = "look_for_it" ] ; then
118 if [ -f /usr/bin/basename ] ; then
119 basename=/usr/bin/basename
120 else
121 if [ -f /bin/basename ] ; then
122 basename=/bin/basename
123 else
124 basename=/usr/ucb/basename
125 fi
126 fi
127fi
128
129if [ "${hostname}" = "look_for_it" ] ; then
130 if [ -f /usr/bin/hostname ] ; then
131 hostname=/usr/bin/hostname
132 else
133 if [ -f /bin/hostname ] ; then
134 hostname=/bin/hostname
135 else
136 hostname=/usr/ucb/hostname
137 fi
138 fi
139fi
140
141# Set hostname to the full hostname with the specified domain
142# stripped off its end. On Solaris 2, the default basename
143# command treats its suffix argument as a pattern. Consequently,
144# if fullhostname contains no dots but ends with what looks like
145# the domain, straightforward use of basename screws things up.
146# Use a general test for this case, just in case any other OS
147# do the same.
148
149fullhostname=`${hostname}`
150case `${basename} abc .c` in
151 a) hostname=`${basename} ${fullhostname} '\.'${DOMAIN}` ;;
152 *) hostname=`${basename} ${fullhostname} .${DOMAIN}` ;;
153esac
154
155
156# Arrange for the window title field to be substituted by the shell
157# so that it can contain either the full or the short host name. This
158# is a tedious little bit of magic, but I don't know how to do it
159# in a less tortuous way.
160
161WINDOW_TITLE=`fullhostname=${fullhostname} hostname=${hostname} /bin/sh <<xx
162echo ${WINDOW_TITLE}
163xx
164`
165
166# Add the X11 library to the library path, and then export the
167# environment variables used by eximon. The string X11-LD-LIBRARY
168# (with underscores, not hyphens) below is replaced by the configured
169# library name when the script is built. (Hyphens are used in the description
170# to stop it getting changed there too.)
171
172X11LIB=X11_LD_LIBRARY
173
174if [ "${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}" = "" ] ; then
175 LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${X11LIB}
176else
177 LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${X11LIB}
178fi
179
180export EXIM_PATH LD_LIBRARY_PATH \
181 LOG_BUFFER LOG_DEPTH LOG_FILE_NAME LOG_FONT LOG_WIDTH \
182 ACTION_OUTPUT ACTION_QUEUE_UPDATE\
183 MENU_EVENT MIN_HEIGHT MIN_WIDTH \
184 QUALIFY_DOMAIN QUEUE_DEPTH QUEUE_FONT QUEUE_INTERVAL QUEUE_MAX_ADDRESSES \
185 QUEUE_STRIPCHART_NAME QUEUE_TOTAL QUEUE_WIDTH SPOOL_DIRECTORY \
186 START_DEPTH LOG_STRIPCHARTS SIZE_STRIPCHART SIZE_STRIPCHART_NAME \
187 START_SMALL STRIPCHART_INTERVAL \
188 TEXT_DEPTH WINDOW_TITLE
189
190# Exec to the program we really want to run, thereby continuing in
191# just the one process, and let it run in parallel with whatever
192# called this script (unless gdb was requested in original $1).
193
194if [ "${use_gdb:-}" = "" ] ; then
195 exec "${EXIMON_BINARY}" $cmd_args &
196else
197 exec "$use_gdb" "${EXIMON_BINARY}" $cmd_args
198 # not backgrounded
199fi
200
201# End