SVCPROP(1)SVCPROP(1)NAMEsvcprop - retrieve values of service configuration properties
SYNOPSISsvcprop [-fqtv] [-C | -c | -s snapshot]
[-z zone] [-p [name/]name]...
{FMRI | pattern}...
svcprop-w [-fqtv] [-z zone] [-p [name/]name] {FMRI | pattern}
DESCRIPTION
The svcprop utility prints values of properties in the service configu‐
ration repository. Properties are selected by -p options and the oper‐
ands.
Without the -C, -c, or -s options, svcprop accesses effective proper‐
ties. The effective properties of a service are its directly attached
properties. The effective properties of a service instance are the
union of properties in the composed view of its running snapshot and
the properties in nonpersistent property groups in the composed view of
the instance's directly attached properties. See smf(5) for an explana‐
tion of property composition. If the running snapshot does not exist
then the instance's directly attached properties are used instead.
Output Format
By default, when a single property is selected, the values for each are
printed on separate lines. Empty ASCII string values are represented by
a pair of double quotes (""). Bourne shell metacharacters (';', '&',
'(', ')', '|', '^', '<', '>', newline, space, tab, backslash, '"', sin‐
gle-quote, '`') in ASCII string values are quoted by backslashes (\).
When multiple properties are selected, a single line is printed for
each. Each line comprises a property designator, a property type, and
the values (as described above), separated by spaces. By default, if a
single FMRI operand has been supplied, the property designator consists
of the property group name and the property name joined by a slash (/).
If multiple FMRI operands are supplied, the designator is the canonical
FMRI for the property.
If access controls prohibit reading the value of a property, and no
property or property group is specified explicitly by a -p option, the
property is displayed as if it had no values. If one or more property
or property group names is specified by a -p option, and any property
value cannot be read due to access controls, an error results.
Error messages are printed to the standard error stream.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-C
Uses the directly attached properties, without composi‐
tion.
-c
For service instances, uses the composed view of their
directly attached properties.
-f
Selects the multi-property output format, with full FMRIs
as designators.
-p name
For each service or service instance specified by the op‐
erands, selects all properties in the name property
group. For property groups specified by the operands,
selects the name property.
-p pg/prop
Selects property prop in property group pg for each of
the services or service instances specified by the oper‐
ands.
-q
Quiet. Produces no output.
-s name
Uses the composed view of the name snapshot for service
instances.
-t
Selects the multi-property output format.
-v
Verbose. Prints error messages for nonexistent proper‐
ties, even if option -q is also used.
-w
Waits until the specified property group or the property
group containing the specified property changes before
printing.
This option is only valid when a single entity is speci‐
fied. If more than one operand is specified, or an oper‐
and matches more than one instance, an error message is
printed and no action is taken. The -C option is implied.
-z zone
Uses properties from the service or instance in the spec‐
ified zone. This option is only applicable from the
global zone, see zones(5).
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
FMRI
The FMRI of a service, a service instance, a property group,
or a property.
Instances and services can be abbreviated by specifying the
instance name, or the trailing portion of the service name.
Properties and property groups must be specified by a full
FMRI. For example, given the FMRI:
svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
The following are valid abbreviations:
sendmail
:sendmail
smtp
smtp:sendmail
network/smtp
The following are invalid abbreviations:
mail
network
network/smt
Abbreviated forms of FMRIs are unstable and should not be
used in scripts or other permanent tools. If an abbreviation
matches multiple instances, svcprop acts on each instance.
pattern
A glob pattern which is matched against the FMRIs of ser‐
vices and instances in the repository. See fnmatch(5). If a
pattern matches multiple services or instances, svcprop acts
on each service or instance.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Displaying the Value of a Single Property
The following example displays the value of the state property in the
restarter property group of instance default of service system/cron.
example% svcprop-p restarter/state system/cron:default
online
Example 2 Retrieving Whether a Service is Enabled
Whether a service is enabled is determined by its -general/enabled
property. This property takes immediate effect, so the -c option must
be used:
example% svcprop-c -p general/enabled system/cron:default
true
Example 3 Displaying All Properties in a Property Group
On a default installation of Solaris, the following example displays
all properties in the general property group of each instance of the
network/ntp service:
example% svcprop-p general ntp
general/package astring SUNWntpr
general/enabled boolean true
general/entity_stability astring Unstable
general/single_instance boolean true
Example 4 Testing the Existance of a Property
The following example tests the existence of the general/enabled prop‐
erty for all instances of service identity:
example% svcprop-q -p general/enabled identity:
example% echo $?
0
Example 5 Waiting for Property Change
The following example waits for the sendmail instance to change state.
example% svcprop-w -p restarter/state sendmail
Example 6 Retrieving the Value of a Boolean Property in a Script
The following example retrieves the value of a boolean property in a
script:
set -- `svcprop -c -t -p general/enabled service`
code=$?
if [ $code -ne 0 ]; then
echo "svcprop failed with exit code $code"
return 1
fi
if [ $2 != boolean ]; then
echo "general/enabled has unexpected type $2"
return 2
fi
if [ $# -ne 3 ]; then
echo "general/enabled has wrong number of values"
return 3
fi
value=$3
...
Example 7 Using svcprop in a Script
example% cat getval
#!/bin/sh
svcprop-p $1 $2 | (
read value v2
if [ -n "$v2" ]; then echo "Multiple values!"; exit; fi
echo $value
)
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0
Successful completion.
1
An error occurred.
2
Invalid command line options were specified.
SEE ALSOsvcs(1), inetd(1M), svcadm(1M), svccfg(1M), svc.startd(1M), ser‐
vice_bundle(4), attributes(5), fnmatch(5), smf(5), smf_method(5),
smf_security(5), zones(5)
Sep 13, 2007 SVCPROP(1)