ref: 6bb619c8db2867ddd9cd19c0aec05065f5ee0cae
dir: /man/8/init/
.TH INIT 8 .SH NAME init: emuinit, osinit \- Inferno initialisation .SH SYNOPSIS .EX Init: module { init: fn(); }; .EE .PP .B /dis/emuinit.dis .PP .B #/./osinit.dis .SH DESCRIPTION Both .IR emu (1) and the native kernels run a Dis program to initialise the system. .PP .I Emuinit is the default initialisation program for .IR emu (1). .I Emu sets the environment variable (see .IR env (3)) .B /env/emuargs to the command line originally given to .IR emu , which has the following form: .IP .B emu .RB [ \-d ] [ .I command .RI [ " arg ..." ] ] .PP .I Emuinit uses the value of .B emuargs to decide which command to start and its arguments. The default .I command is .BR /dis/sh.dis , unless the .B \-d option is given, in which case .B /dis/lib/srv.dis is used by default instead, to cause .I emu to run on the host system as a server (`daemon' mode). .PP .I Osinit is built-in to the .IR root (3) of native kernels. Although the kernel uses the fixed name .B #/./osinit.dis the contents are taken from one of the files in .B /os/init selected by the .B init section of the kernel configuration file. .IR Osinit 's action is platform-specific in detail, but might include: building an initial .B /dev by mounting device drivers; binding the physical network driver (eg, .IR ether (3)) into .B /net and initialising .IR ip (3), usually setting addresses and routes using .BR bootp ; attaching to a remote file system; setting up flash translation using .IR ftl (3); starting .I dossrv or .I 9660srv (see .IR dossrv (4)), or .IR kfs (3) to serve local files from disk or flash memory. .SH FILES .B /env/emuargs .SH SOURCE .B /appl/cmd/emuinit.b .br .B /os/init/*.b .SH SEE ALSO .IR emu (1)