# runsvinit If you have a Docker container that's a collection of runit-supervised daemons, this process is suitable for use as the ENTRYPOINT. See [the example](https://github.com/peterbourgon/runsvinit/tree/master/example). **Why not just exec runsvdir?** `docker stop` issues SIGTERM (or, in a future version of Docker, perhaps another custom signal) but if runsvdir receives a signal, it doesn't wait for its supervised processes to exit before returning. If you don't care about graceful shutdown of your daemons, no problem, you don't need this tool. **Why not wrap runsvdir in a simple shell script?** This works great: ```sh #!/bin/sh sv_stop() { for s in $(ls -d /etc/service/*) do /sbin/sv stop $s done } trap "sv_stop; exit" SIGTERM /sbin/runsvdir /etc/service & wait ``` ...except it doesn't [reap orphaned child processes](https://blog.phusion.nl/2015/01/20/docker-and-the-pid-1-zombie-reaping-problem/) and is therefore unsuitable for being PID 1. **Why not use my_init from [phusion/baseimage-docker](https://github.com/phusion/baseimage-docker)?** That works great — if you're willing to add python3 to your Docker images :) **So this is just a stripped-down my_init in Go?** Basically, yes.