On Sun, Nov 27, 2011 at 13:06, clemens fischer < ino-news@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Myra Nelson wrote: > > > Alsa is in my daemons array and starts. The problem is the udev > > rule to restore the volume levels fails as it is run before /usr > > is mounted. That's why I was asking about udev rules and why [ > > /usr/bin/alsactl restore ] works from the console after I've > > booted. After reading through the initscripts, rc.d, and mkinitcpio > > code I think it may be possible to run: > > > > [ > > run_hook sysinit_postmount > > > > udevam control --reload-rules > > > > run_hook single_end > > ] > > > > in rc.local. > > The hooks don't work like this, rc.local might run too late. > > You'd make a file eg. /etc/rc.d/functions.d/my-hooks.sh: > > my_sysinit_postmount_udevadm() > { > udevadm control --reload-rules || > echo "my_sysinit_postmount_udevadm: udevadm err $?" > return 0 > } > add_hook sysinit_postmount my_sysinit_postmount_udevadm > > Putting the file into etc/rc.d/functions.d/ will let the hooks system > see and source it, and add_hook() will put your function into the array > of functions to run at a specific point. The list of hooks is in > etc/rc.d/functions and a custom hook function is a regular shell > function. No special error handling or sandboxing is done on them, so > you want to make sure they don't block or kill the shell. This is why > I'd recommend to use the "|| ..." clause after some user command and to > return a zero at the end, though ATM neither seems strictly necessary. > It will make a hook funtion future proof, I presume. > > > clemens > > Clemens: Thanks for the reply. I figured out the hook didn't work that way but it didn't keep me from booting. Removing the run_hook around the udevadm command and leaving it in rc.local takes care of the problem. It's only necessary to restore the volume state stored in the asound file in /etc and the udevadm command takes care of it. However I will take your response and study the hooks and how to use them and learn something from this experience. Myra -- Life's fun when your sick and psychotic!