@dgroos:
CmapServer installer does not create the daemon, so you will need to create it by yourself. I am assuming you can use "sudo", otherwise you will need to ask your service provider to install the daemon for you.
How?
Create a file called CmapServerd under /etc/init.d and implement the start() and stop() operations. The restart() is simply a call to stop() and then call start().
Please notice that I cannot test my example, so it will probably fail, but at least it will give you an idea of what you have to do. Next week I could share with you the script I normally use.
Content of CmapServerd file:
start() {
/opt/IHMC_CmapServer/bin/cmapserver
}
stop() {
killall CmapServerd
}
case "$1" in
start)
start
;;
stop)
stop
;;
*)
echo $"Usage: $prog {start|stop}"
exit 1
exit 1
After you create the file you will need to add execution permissions
chmod 755 CmapServerd
Then add the daemon:
chkconfig --add CmapServerd
You can either restart the machine and see if the daemon was properly installed or run
chkconfig CmapServerd on
You can check any file under /etc/init.d and see how the structure is.
Some info:
http://my.opera.com/pddinh/blog/2007/10 ... -on-redhat