#! /bin/sh # $Cambridge: exim/src/src/exiwhat.src,v 1.3 2009/01/02 16:58:05 nm4 Exp $ # Copyright (c) 2003 University of Cambridge. # See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. # Except when they appear in comments, the following placeholders in this # source are replaced when it is turned into a runnable script: # # CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE # CONFIGURE_FILE # BIN_DIRECTORY # EXIWHAT_PS_CMD # EXIWHAT_PS_ARG # EXIWHAT_KILL_SIGNAL # EXIWHAT_EGREP_ARG # EXIWHAT_MULTIKILL_CMD # EXIWHAT_MULTIKILL_ARG # PROCESSED_FLAG # Shell script for seeing what the exim processes are doing. It gets rid # of the old process log, then sends SIGUSR1 to all exim processes to get # them to write their state to the log. Then it displays the contents of # the log. # The following lines are generated from Exim's configuration file when # this source is built into a script, but you can subsequently edit them # without rebuilding things, as long are you are careful not to overwrite # the script in the next Exim rebuild/install. However, it's best to # arrange your build-time configuration file to get the correct values. # Some operating systems have a command that finds processes that match # certain conditions (by default usually those running specific commands) # and sends them signals. If such a command is defined for your OS, the # following variables are set and used. multikill_cmd=EXIWHAT_MULTIKILL_CMD multikill_arg=EXIWHAT_MULTIKILL_ARG # In other operating systems, Exim has to use "ps" and "egrep" to find the # processes itself. In those cases, the next three variables are used: ps_cmd=EXIWHAT_PS_CMD ps_arg=EXIWHAT_PS_ARG egrep_arg=EXIWHAT_EGREP_ARG # In both cases, kill_arg is the argument for the (multi)kill command to send # SIGUSR1 (at least one OS requires a numeric value). signal=EXIWHAT_KILL_SIGNAL # See if this installation is using the esoteric "USE_NODE" feature of Exim, # in which it uses the host's name as a suffix for the configuration file name. if [ "CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE" = "yes" ]; then hostsuffix=.`uname -n` fi # Now find the configuration file name. This has got complicated because # CONFIGURE_FILE may now be a list of files. The one that is used is the first # one that exists. Mimic the code in readconf.c by testing first for the # suffixed file in each case. set `awk -F: '{ for (i = 1; i <= NF; i++) print $i }' </dev/null 2>&1; then $multikill_cmd $signal "$multikill_arg" # No multikill command; do it the hard way else $ps_cmd $ps_arg | \ egrep "$egrep_arg" | \ awk "{print \"kill $signal \"\$1}" | \ uniq | sh fi sleep 1 if [ ! -s ${log} ] ; then echo "No exim process data" ; else sed 's/^[0-9-]* [0-9:]* \([+-][0-9]* \)*//' ${log} | sort -n | uniq ; fi # End of exiwhat