init
Coordination of System Startup
The init module is pre-loaded and contains the code for
the init system process which coordinates the start-up of
the system. The first function evaluated at start-up is
boot(BootArgs), where BootArgs is a list of command
line arguments supplied to the Erlang runtime system from
the local operating system. See
erl(1).
init reads the boot script which contains instructions on
how to initiate the system. See
script(4) for more
information about boot scripts.
init also contains functions to restart, reboot, and stop
the system.
Functions
boot(BootArgs) -> void()
BootArgs = [binary()]
Starts the Erlang runtime system. This function is called when the emulator is started and coordinates system start-up.
BootArgs are all command line arguments except
the emulator flags, that is, flags and plain arguments. See
erl(1).
init itself interprets some of the flags, see
Command Line Flags below.
The remaining flags ("user flags") and plain arguments are
passed to the init loop and can be retrieved by calling
get_arguments/0 and get_plain_arguments/0,
respectively.
get_args() -> [Arg]
Arg = atom()
Returns any plain command line arguments as a list of atoms
(possibly empty). It is recommended that
get_plain_arguments/1 is used instead, because of
the limited length of atoms.
get_argument(Flag) -> {ok, Arg} | error
Flag = atom()Arg = [Values]Values = [string()]
Returns all values associated with the command line user flag
Flag. If Flag is provided several times, each
Values is returned in preserved order.
%erl -a b c -a d... 1>init:get_argument(a).{ok,[["b","c"],["d"]]}
There are also a number of flags, which are defined automatically and can be retrieved using this function:
root-
The installation directory of Erlang/OTP,
$ROOT.2>
init:get_argument(root).{ok,[["/usr/local/otp/releases/otp_beam_solaris8_r10b_patched"]]} progname-
The name of the program which started Erlang.
3>
init:get_argument(progname).{ok,[["erl"]]} home-
The home directory.
4>
init:get_argument(home).{ok,[["/home/harry"]]}
Returns error if there is no value associated with
Flag.
get_arguments() -> Flags
Flags = [{Flag, Values}]Flag = atom()Values = [string()]
Returns all command line flags, as well as the system
defined flags, see get_argument/1.
get_plain_arguments() -> [Arg]
Arg = string()
Returns any plain command line arguments as a list of strings (possibly empty).
get_status() -> {InternalStatus, ProvidedStatus}
InternalStatus = starting | started | stoppingProvidedStatus = term()
The current status of the init process can be
inspected. During system startup (initialization),
InternalStatus is starting, and
ProvidedStatus indicates how far the boot script has
been interpreted. Each {progress, Info} term
interpreted in the boot script affects ProvidedStatus,
that is, ProvidedStatus gets the value of Info.
reboot() -> void()
All applications are taken down smoothly, all code is
unloaded, and all ports are closed before the system
terminates. If the -heart command line flag was given,
the heart program will try to reboot the system. Refer
to heart(3) for more information.
To limit the shutdown time, the time init is allowed
to spend taking down applications, the -shutdown_time
command line flag should be used.
restart() -> void()
The system is restarted inside the running Erlang
node, which means that the emulator is not restarted. All
applications are taken down smoothly, all code is unloaded,
and all ports are closed before the system is booted again in
the same way as initially started. The same BootArgs
are used again.
To limit the shutdown time, the time init is allowed
to spend taking down applications, the -shutdown_time
command line flag should be used.
script_id() -> Id
Id = term()
Get the identity of the boot script used to boot the system.
Id can be any Erlang term. In the delivered boot
scripts, Id is {Name, Vsn}. Name and
Vsn are strings.
stop() -> void()
All applications are taken down smoothly, all code is
unloaded, and all ports are closed before the system
terminates. If the -heart command line flag was given,
the heart program is terminated before the Erlang node
terminates. Refer to heart(3) for more information.
To limit the shutdown time, the time init is allowed
to spend taking down applications, the -shutdown_time
command line flag should be used.
stop(Status) -> void()
Status = int()>=0 | string()
All applications are taken down smoothly, all code is
unloaded, and all ports are closed before the system
terminates by calling halt(Status). If the
-heart command line flag was given, the heart
program is terminated before the Erlang node
terminates. Refer to heart(3) for more
information.
To limit the shutdown time, the time init is allowed
to spend taking down applications, the -shutdown_time
command line flag should be used.
Command Line Flags
Warning!
The support for loading of code from archive files is
experimental. The sole purpose of releasing it before it is ready
is to obtain early feedback. The file format, semantics,
interfaces etc. may be changed in a future release. The
-code_path_choice flag is also experimental.
The init module interprets the following command line
flags:
---
Everything following
--up to the next flag is considered plain arguments and can be retrieved usingget_plain_arguments/0. -code_path_choice Choice-
This flag can be set to
strictorrelaxed. It controls whether each directory in the code path should be interpreted strictly as it appears in theboot scriptor ifinitshould be more relaxed and try to find a suitable directory if it can choose from a regular ebin directory and an ebin directory in an archive file. This flag is particular useful when you want to elaborate with code loading from archives without editing theboot script. See script(4) for more information about interpretation of boot scripts. The flag does also have a similar affect on how the code server works. See code(3). -eval Expr-
Scans, parses and evaluates an arbitrary expression
Exprduring system initialization. If any of these steps fail (syntax error, parse error or exception during evaluation), Erlang stops with an error message. Here is an example that seeds the random number generator:%
erl -eval '{X,Y,Z}' = now(), random:seed(X,Y,Z).'This example uses Erlang as a hexadecimal calculator:
%
erl -noshell -eval 'R = 16#1F+16#A0, io:format("~.16B~n", [R])' \\-s erlang haltBFIf multiple
-evalexpressions are specified, they are evaluated sequentially in the order specified.-evalexpressions are evaluated sequentially with-sand-runfunction calls (this also in the order specified). As with-sand-run, an evaluation that does not terminate, blocks the system initialization process. -extra-
Everything following
-extrais considered plain arguments and can be retrieved usingget_plain_arguments/0. -run Mod [Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]-
Evaluates the specified function call during system initialization.
Funcdefaults tostart. If no arguments are provided, the function is assumed to be of arity 0. Otherwise it is assumed to be of arity 1, taking the list[Arg1,Arg2,...]as argument. All arguments are passed as strings. If an exception is raised, Erlang stops with an error message.Example:
%
erl -run foo -run foo bar -run foo bar baz 1 2This starts the Erlang runtime system and evaluates the following functions:
foo:start() foo:bar() foo:bar(["baz", "1", "2"]).
The functions are executed sequentially in an initialization process, which then terminates normally and passes control to the user. This means that a
-runcall which does not return will block further processing; to avoid this, use some variant ofspawnin such cases. -s Mod [Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]-
Evaluates the specified function call during system initialization.
Funcdefaults tostart. If no arguments are provided, the function is assumed to be of arity 0. Otherwise it is assumed to be of arity 1, taking the list[Arg1,Arg2,...]as argument. All arguments are passed as atoms. If an exception is raised, Erlang stops with an error message.Example:
%
erl -s foo -s foo bar -s foo bar baz 1 2This starts the Erlang runtime system and evaluates the following functions:
foo:start() foo:bar() foo:bar([baz, '1', '2']).
The functions are executed sequentially in an initialization process, which then terminates normally and passes control to the user. This means that a
-scall which does not return will block further processing; to avoid this, use some variant ofspawnin such cases.Due to the limited length of atoms, it is recommended that
-runbe used instead.
Example
%erl -- a b -children thomas claire -ages 7 3 -- x y... 1>init:get_plain_arguments().["a","b","x","y"] 2>init:get_argument(children).{ok,[["thomas","claire"]]} 3>init:get_argument(ages).{ok, [["7","3"]]} 4>init:get_argument(silly).error