### Start BOSWatch as a daemon ##### Changing the init script Lines 14 and 15 define where to find the Python script. In this case the script expects that there is a folder `/usr/local/bin/BOSWatch` and that the script is inside there. Line 23 sets what user to run the script as. Using a root-user is necessary for BOSWatch. Line 19 sets the parameters for BOSWatch, use the same as starting BOSWatch from the shell. We recommend to use "-u" and "-q" when you want to run BOSWatch as a daemon. - "-u": You will find the logfiles in `/var/log/BOSWatch` - "-q": Shows no information. Only logfiles ##### Using the init script To actually use this script, put BOSWatch where you want (recommend `/usr/local/bin/BOSWatch`) and make sure it is executable (e.g. `sudo chmod 755 boswatch.py`). Edit the init script accordingly. Copy it into /etc/init.d using e.g. `sudo cp boswatch.sh /etc/init.d`. Make sure the script is executable (chmod again) and make sure that it has UNIX line-endings. At this point you should be able to start BOSWatchcd ~/srt using the command `sudo /etc/init.d/boswatch.sh start`, check its status with the `sudo /etc/init.d/boswatch.sh status` argument and stop it with `sudo /etc/init.d/boswatch.sh stop`. To make the Raspberry Pi use your init script at the right time, one more step is required: Running the command `sudo update-rc.d boswatch.sh defaults`. This command adds in symbolic links to the /etc/rc.x directories so that the init script is run at the default times. You can see these links if you do `ls -l /etc/rc?.d/*boswatch.sh`