Starting Yate
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a Abort if bugs are encountered | a Abort if bugs are encountered | ||
m Attempt to debug mutex deadlocks | m Attempt to debug mutex deadlocks | ||
− | d | + | d Enable locking debugging and safety features |
l Try to keep module symbols local | l Try to keep module symbols local | ||
c Call dlclose() until it gets an error | c Call dlclose() until it gets an error | ||
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* [[Stopping and restarting Yate]] | * [[Stopping and restarting Yate]] | ||
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+ | [[Category:Administrate]] |
Latest revision as of 11:43, 8 December 2021
This page purpose is to describe how to use command line with all his available options when starting Yate server on different platforms.
Contents |
[edit] Instructions to start Yate on linux
[edit] Yate installed from SVN
You can run YATE directly from the build directory - just use 'run' script from the main directory.
You can also install YATE - then you can run it from anywhere.
On the command line you can use '-v' to increase the verbosity level.
If in doubt run in shell the following command to get a list of possible options:
./run -h (or yate -h if installed)
If Yate has a problem when starting you can increase the number of -v in the command to see more error messages.
Example:
./run -vvvvv (or yate -vvvvv if installed)
In some cases modules haven't been well compiled and you will get a message like "unresolved symbol", then you should verify if the used library is the same with linking library.
Below you can find a list with all possible command with their options to use when starting Yate:
Usage: yate [options] [commands ...] -h, --help Display help message (this one) and exit -V, --version Display program version and exit -v Verbose debugging (you can use more than once) -q Quieter debugging (you can use more than once) -d Daemonify, suppress output unless logged -s Supervised, restart if crashes or locks up -r Enable rotation of log file (needs -s and -l) -p filename Write PID to file -l filename Log to file -n configname Use specified configuration name () -e pathname Path to shared files directory (/usr/local/share/yate) -c pathname Path to conf files directory (/usr/local/etc/yate) -u pathname Path to user files directory (/home/username/.yate) -m pathname Path to modules directory (/usr/local/lib/yate) -x relpath Relative path to extra modules directory (can be repeated) -w directory Change working directory -N nodename Set the name of this node in a cluster -C Enable core dumps if possible -F Increase the maximum file handle to compiled value -t Truncate log file, don't append to it -D[options] Special debugging options a Abort if bugs are encountered m Attempt to debug mutex deadlocks d Enable locking debugging and safety features l Try to keep module symbols local c Call dlclose() until it gets an error u Do not unload modules on exit, just finalize i Reinitialize after 1st initialization x Exit immediately after initialization w Delay creation of 1st worker thread o Colorize output using ANSI codes s Abort on bugs even during shutdown t Timestamp debugging messages relative to program start e Timestamp debugging messages based on EPOCH (1-1-1970 GMT) f Timestamp debugging in GMT format YYYYMMDDhhmmss.uuuuuu z Timestamp debugging in local timezone YYYYMMDDhhmmss.uuuuuu
Not all the options above may be available, they depend on the Yate version and the operating system's capabilities.
[edit] Yate installed from package
When Yate is installed from a package the init script in /etc/rc.d/init.d/ should take care of providing the proper init parameters for starting Yate as a service.
The most important options are -d and -s to run as a supervised daemon. This allows Yate to restart automatically if it crashes or locks up.
It is also important to provide -r so logs can be rotated without stopping Yate.
[edit] Instructions to start Yate on Windows
See Starting on windows for platform specific instructions.
See also