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12.2. Configuring the Services
To allow you to configure which services are started at boot time, Red Hat Enterprise Linux is shipped with the following utilities: the Service Configuration graphical application, the ntsysv text user interface, and the chkconfig command-line tool.
Important
To ensure optimal performance on POWER architecture, it is recommended that the
irqbalance
service is enabled. In most cases, this service is installed and configured to run during the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 installation. To verify that irqbalance
is running, as root
, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]# service irqbalance status
irqbalance (pid 1234) is running...
For information on how to enable and run a service using a graphical user interface, see Section 12.2.1, “Using the Service Configuration Utility”. For instructions on how to perform these task on the command line, see Section 12.2.3, “Using the chkconfig Utility” and Section 12.3, “Running Services” respectively.
12.2.1. Using the Service Configuration Utility
The Service Configuration utility is a graphical application developed by Red Hat to configure which services are started in a particular runlevel, as well as to start, stop, and restart them from the menu. To start the utility, select from the panel, or type the command
system-config-services
at a shell prompt.
Note
The
system-config-services
utility is provided by the system-config-services package, which may not be installed by default on your version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. To ensure that, first run the following command:
~]$ rpm -q system-config-services
If the package is not installed by default, install it manually by running the following command as root:
~]# yum install system-config-services
Figure 12.1. The Service Configuration utility
The utility displays the list of all available services (services from the
/etc/rc.d/init.d/
directory, as well as services controlled by xinetd) along with their description and the current status. For a complete list of used icons and an explanation of their meaning, see Table 12.2, “Possible service states”.
Note that unless you are already authenticated, you will be prompted to enter the superuser password the first time you make a change.
Icon | Description |
---|---|
The service is enabled. | |
The service is disabled. | |
The service is enabled for selected runlevels only. | |
The service is running. | |
The service is stopped. | |
There is something wrong with the service. | |
The status of the service is unknown. |
12.2.1.1. Enabling and Disabling a Service
To enable a service, select it from the list and either click the Enable button on the toolbar, or choose from the main menu.
To disable a service, select it from the list and either click the Disable button on the toolbar, or choose from the main menu.
12.2.1.2. Starting, Restarting, and Stopping a Service
To start a service, select it from the list and either click the Start button on the toolbar, or choose from the main menu. Note that this option is not available for services controlled by xinetd, as they are started by it on demand.
To restart a running service, select it from the list and either click the Restart button on the toolbar, or choose from the main menu. Note that this option is not available for services controlled by xinetd, as they are started and stopped by it automatically.
To stop a service, select it from the list and either click the Stop button on the toolbar, or choose from the main menu. Note that this option is not available for services controlled by xinetd, as they are stopped by it when their job is finished.
12.2.1.3. Selecting Runlevels
To enable the service for certain runlevels only, select it from the list and either click the Customize button on the toolbar, or choose from the main menu. Then select the check box beside each runlevel in which you want the service to run. Note that this option is not available for services controlled by xinetd.