Provided by: debian-goodies_0.84ubuntu0.1_all bug

NAME

       checkrestart - check which processes need to be restarted after an upgrade

SYNOPSIS

       checkrestart [ -hvpanmt ] [ -b blacklist_file ] [ -i package_name ] [ -e pid ]

DESCRIPTION

       The  checkrestart  program  tries  to  determine  if  there  are  processes in the system that need to be
       restarted after a system upgrade. This is necessary since  an  upgrade  will  usually  bring  new  system
       libraries  and  running processes will be still using the old versions of the libraries. In stable Debian
       GNU/Linux systems this is typically needed to eliminate a system exposure to a vulnerability which  might
       have been fixed by upgrading a library which that process makes use of.

       Consequently,  checkrestart  is sometimes used as an audit tool to find outdated versions of libraries in
       use, particularly after security upgrades.  Administrators  should  not,  however,  rely  on  its  output
       completely (see BUGS below).

       This script needs to run as root in order to obtain the information it needs for analysis.

OPTIONS

       -h,  --help
              Show the program help and exit.

       -v, --verbose
              Generate detailed output. This output includes the list of all processes found using deleted files
              or descriptors as well as the deleted files and descriptors found.

       -p, --package
              Only process deleted files that belong to a package, ignoring deleted files which do not  have  an
              associated package in the package system.

       -a, --all
              Process  all  deleted  files  regardless of location. This makes the program analyse deleted files
              even if they would be discarded because they are located in locations, such as /tmp  ,  which  are
              known to produce false positives. It will take preceded if used simultaneously with the -p option.

       -m, --machine
              Generate  machine  readable  output.  One  line  is  printed  per program which must be restarted:
              "TYPE:package_name,pid,program". Where TYPE is INIT , if a systemd service file or an init  script
              is available to restart the program, and OTHER otherwise.

       -b file, --blacklist=file
              Read  a  blacklist  of  regular  expressions  from  file.  Any files matching the patterns will be
              ignored. More than one pattern can be provided by using this option more than once.

       -i name, --ignore=name
              Ignore services that are associated to the package name provided in name.  More than  one  package
              can be provided by using this option more than once.

       -e pid, --excludepid=pid
              Exclude  processes running with pid when looking for open files. This can speed up checkrestart on
              systems with a large number of open files. Note: this option only works if lsof(8)  is  not  used.
              More than one process identifier can be provided by using this option more than once.

       -n, --nolsof
              Do  not  use  lsof(8) even if available. In some systems where there are large number of files the
              use of lsof might be inefficient. Use this option to disable lsof. Notice also that if lsof is not
              installed  an  alternative  mechanism to extract deleted files will be used instead. Consequently,
              there is no need to set this option in systems that do not have lsof(8) installed.

       -t,--terse
              Terse output, just print the number of open deleted files and exit with a code suitable for use by
              Nagios and similar monitoring tools (see Exit Status).

EXIT STATUS

       Normally,  the  program  will  exit with error (1) if a non-root user tries to run it. Otherwise, it will
       always exit with error status 0.

       If the --terse switch is given, the exit code is 1 when there are deleted open files and 0 when there are
       none. This is intended for consumption by Nagios and similar automated monitoring tools.

EXAMPLE

       Start it as user root without parameters:

         # checkrestart
         Found 20 processes using old versions of upgraded files
         (15 distinct programs)
         (14 distinct packages)

         Of these, 12 seem to contain init scripts which can be used to restart them:
         The following packages seem to have init scripts that could be used to restart them:
         gpm:
                 3044    /usr/sbin/gpm
         rpcbind:
                 2208    /sbin/rpcbind
         bind9:
                 8463    /usr/sbin/named
         openssh-server:
                 22124   /usr/sbin/sshd
         ntp:
                 4078    /usr/sbin/ntpd
         tftpd-hpa:
                 3417    /usr/sbin/in.tftpd
         uptimed:
                 2704    /usr/sbin/uptimed
         cron:
                 3019    /usr/sbin/cron
         postfix:
                 22145   /usr/lib/postfix/qmgr
                 8892    /usr/lib/postfix/master
         hddtemp:
                 3174    /usr/sbin/hddtemp
         autofs:
                 2792    /usr/sbin/automount
         openbsd-inetd:
                 3254    /usr/sbin/inetd

         These are the init scripts:
         service gpm restart
         service rpcbind restart
         service bind9 restart
         service ssh restart
         service ntp restart
         service tftpd-hpa restart
         service uptimed restart
         service cron restart
         service postfix restart
         service hddtemp restart
         service autofs restart
         service openbsd-inetd restart

         These processes do not seem to have an associated init script to restart them:
         isc-dhcp-client:
                 3775    /sbin/dhclient

       This is another example to show the machine-readable output:

         # checkrestart --machine
         PROCESSES: 4
         PROGRAMS: 4
         PACKAGES: 2
         INIT:bcfg2-server,6974,/usr/sbin/bcfg2-server
         INIT:exim4-daemon-light,857,/usr/sbin/exim4
         OTHER:aptitude,11679,/usr/bin/aptitude-curses
         OTHER:xscreensaver,6562,/usr/bin/xscreensaver

BUGS

       This  program  might  fail  if the output of the lsof(8) utility changes since it depends on it to detect
       which deleted files are used by processes. It might also output some false  positives  depending  on  the
       processes' behaviour since it does not check yet if the (deleted) files in use are really libraries.

       If  you  find a false positive in checkrestart please provide the following information when submitting a
       bug report:

       —      The output of checkrestart using the -v (verbose) option.

       —      The output of running the following command as root:

               lsof | egrep 'delete|DEL|path inode'

       checkrestart is also sensitive to the kernel version in use. And might fail to work with newer (or older)
       versions.

SEE ALSO

       lsof(8), needrestart(8)

       Please  note  that  the  needrestart program uses a different logic to determine which services should be
       restarted based on deleted files. Results might not be exactly the same as those provided by checkrestart

AUTHOR

       checkrestart was written by Matt Zimmerman for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution. It was  later  improved
       by  Javier  Fernandez-Sanguino  with contributions from many different users and developers of the Debian
       GNU/Linux distribution.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE

       Copyright (C) 2001 Matt Zimmerman <mdz@debian.org>
       Copyright (C) 2007,2010-2015 Javier Fernandez-Sanguino <jfs@debian.org>

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  it  under  the  terms  of  the  GNU
       General  Public  License  as  published  by  the  Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       On Debian systems, a copy of the GNU General Public License version 2 can be found in  /usr/share/common-
       licenses/GPL-2.