You can create `down` files in the service dirs as described in [1] and enable the services from a script at boot time.
[1]: http://smarden.org/runit/runsv.8.html On 4 June 2015 at 22:41, Jameson Graef Rollins <jroll...@finestructure.net> wrote: > Hi, all. I am using runit to supervise a large set of nearly identical > processes. Each process accesses certain IO-bound shared resources > (e.g. NFS mount) at startup. At system initialization, when runsvdir is > launched, it launches all these processes (via runsv) essentially > simultaneously. This causes a big resource contention at initialization > that occasionally causes problems. > > What I would like is to somehow stagger the startup of the processes, to > avoid the resource contention. I could do this by putting a random > sleep into the ./run scripts, but this would also cause random startup > delays on subsequent process restarts via "sv restart" or the like > (which we occasionally need to do). > > What I would prefer instead is to add random delays to the startup of > the *runsv* processes, since this would only apply at system > initialization. Unfortunately I can't see any way to do that right now > (other than somehow wrapping the runsv binary itself). > > Does anyone know any way to accomplish what I'm looking for? I don't > believe runsvdir supports any options that would apply here. Is it > possible to somehow point runsvdir to a alternate runsv executable to > which I could add the random delays? > > Any suggestions would be much appreciated. Thanks. > > jamie.