CONSADM(8) Maintenance Procedures CONSADM(8)


NAME


consadm - select or display devices used as auxiliary console devices

SYNOPSIS


/usr/sbin/consadm


/usr/sbin/consadm [-a device...] [-p]


/usr/sbin/consadm [-d device...] [-p]


/usr/sbin/consadm [-p]


DESCRIPTION


consadm selects the hardware device or devices to be used as auxiliary
console devices, or displays the current device. Only superusers are
allowed to make or display auxiliary console device selections.


Auxiliary console devices receive copies of console messages, and can be
used as the console during single user mode. In particular, they receive
kernel messages and messages directed to /dev/sysmsg. On Solaris x86
based systems they can also be used for interaction with the bootstrap.


By default, selecting a display device to be used as an auxiliary console
device selects that device for the duration the system remains up. If the
administrator needs the selection to persist across reboots the -p option
can be specified.


consadm runs a daemon in the background, monitoring auxiliary console
devices. Any devices that are disconnected (hang up, lose carrier) are
removed from the auxiliary console device list, though not from the
persistent list. While auxiliary console devices may have been removed
from the device list receiving copies of console messages, those messages
will always continue to be displayed by the default console device.


The daemon will not run if it finds there are not any auxiliary devices
configured to monitor. Likewise, after the last auxiliary console is
removed, the daemon will shut itself down. Therefore the daemon persists
for only as long as auxiliary console devices remain active.


See eeprom(8) for instructions on assigning an auxiliary console device
as the system console.

OPTIONS


The following options are supported:

-a device
Adds device to the list of auxiliary console devices.
Specify device as the path name to the device or devices to
be added to the auxiliary console device list.


-d device
Removes device from the list of auxiliary console devices.
Specify device as the path name to the device or devices to
be removed from the auxiliary console device list.


-p
Prints the list of auxiliary consoles that will be auxiliary
across reboots.

When invoked with the -a or -d options , tells the
application to make the change persist across reboot.


EXAMPLES


Example 1: Adding to the list of devices that will receive console


messages


The following command adds /dev/term/a to the list of devices that will
receive console messages.


example# consadm -a /dev/term/a


Example 2: Removing from the list of devices that will receive console


messages


The following command removes /dev/term/a from the list of devices that
will receive console messages. This includes removal from the persistent
list.


example# consadm -d -p /dev/term/a


Example 3: Printing the list of devices selected as auxiliary console


devices


The following command prints the name or names of the device or devices
currently selected as auxiliary console devices.


example# consadm


ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES


See environ(7) for descriptions of the following environment variables
that affect the execution of consadm: LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES, and NLSPATH.

EXIT STATUS


The following exit values are returned:

0
Successful completion.


>0
An error occurred.


ATTRIBUTES


See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


+----------------+-----------------+
|ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+----------------+-----------------+
|Stability Level | Evolving |
+----------------+-----------------+

SEE ALSO


svcs(1), console(4D), sysmsg(4D), attributes(7), environ(7), smf(7),
eeprom(8), kadb(8), svcadm(8), syslogd(8)

NOTES


Auxiliary console devices are not usable for kadb or firmware I/O, do not
receive panic messages, and do not receive output directed to
/dev/console.


The consadm service is managed by the service management facility,
smf(7), under the service identifier:

svc:/system/consadm


Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or
requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(8). The service's
status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.


October 27, 2004 CONSADM(8)