Matt,
Thanx for answering but this is not quite what I was looking for. I know the
mechanics of how to assign scripts to particular runlevel. What I'm looking
for is a definition of what belongs to a particular runlevel. At installation
time you can indicate which scripts you'd like to run. It will then create all
the necessary scripts at all the correct runlevels. What about after the fact?
If I want to start running autofs or or inews, how can I find out which
runlevels should have the start/stop symlinks?
>>>>> "Matt" == Matt Housh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Matt> The default runlevel is 3, iirc, and therefore scripts are run
Matt> from /etc/rc.d/rc3.d. Scripts are run from the dir
Matt> /etc/rc.d/rc<runlevel>.d, as per default. If you want a script to run
Matt> in a certain runlevel, you could either create it in that runlevel's
Matt> specific directory, or create it in /etc/rc.d/init.d, and symlink it,
Matt> like the defaults. Keep in mind that the script's name in that
Matt> specific dir is important. Scripts with higher numbers in their name
Matt> get executed later, such as S40crond being executed before
Matt> S91smb. You might look into the graphical runlevel tool, as well,
Matt> called tksysv. (Can also be run from control-panel, of course.) HTH
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