Dear List, In the situation I am facing, a database is not shutdown by the systemd script that started it at boot. (Its start point was actually hacked into a related bash file called by another systems script without a shutdown hack.) There is no "ExecStop" line. NO, IT WAS NO MY DOING !!!
I am not saying which (proprietary) database as I don’t want to get into any legal cross hairs. Anyway, someone else is using the database. The database works fine. The vendor is not systemd literate and keeps complaining about it only works under SysV. And no, they won’t give me the SysV rc.d scripts and let me convert it for them. And, yes, I know, you can still use SysV if you must. But, again, as I said, it is not my doing. I am thinking there is a possibility of data corruptions. Question: does the general shutdown take care of this issue? Am I presuming too much to think this is handled by the general shutdown global SIGTERM? The database does properly respond to SIGTERM. Do I understand the global SIGTERM correctly? Many thanks, -T
