Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-27 Thread Daniel Barclay
Michelle Konzack wrote: Hello Tarvin, Am 2006-02-19 18:02:20, schrieb Digby Tarvin: Debian by default does not make good use (IMHO) of the runlevel mechanism. Oh yes, it does. No, it does not. The runlevel mechanism allocates 4 multi-user levels. Debian uses only one. (Making all four

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-24 Thread Digby Tarvin
On Fri, Feb 24, 2006 at 02:50:34PM +0100, Michelle Konzack wrote: > Hello Tarvin, > > Am 2006-02-19 18:02:20, schrieb Digby Tarvin: > > Debian by default does not make good use (IMHO) of the runlevel mechanism. > > Oh yes, it does. Actually I was expressing my opinion (that is what IMHO means),

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-24 Thread Michelle Konzack
Hello Tarvin, Am 2006-02-19 18:02:20, schrieb Digby Tarvin: > Debian by default does not make good use (IMHO) of the runlevel mechanism. Oh yes, it does. Debian give you the freedom to configure your rcX.d HOW YOU WANT! > It bundles all multi-user stuff into runlevel 2 and then leaves 3-5 undef

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Henrique Rennó
Hello Everybody!!! Thanks for all the answers!!! I'll take a look at each option all of you have passed to me. Regards -- Henrique

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 14:54:13 -0300 "Henrique Rennó" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello!!! > > Thanks for the answer!!! How do I remove the gdm/kdm/xdm from run level 2? > > Regards > > -- > Henrique You can just simply delete the respective links from /etc/init.d/rc2.d or try using a runlevel

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Digby Tarvin
My initial reply wasn't copied to the list, so I'll repeat this in case anyone else is interested Just to re-iterate, changing the runlevel between values in the range 2-5 won't have any effect until you change the runlevel definitions... To do that, read the man page for update-rc.d(8)... R

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Henrique Rennó
Hello Digby!!! Thanks for the attention!!! I didn't know it was a configuration of Debian. I thought it was a problem of my installation. I'll change my inittab to level 2 and run "telinit 5" like you said (or init 5, if it works too). Regards -- Henrique

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Digby Tarvin
Debian by default does not make good use (IMHO) of the runlevel mechanism. It bundles all multi-user stuff into runlevel 2 and then leaves 3-5 undefined (or the same as 2, depending on who you talk to). As far as I know, they are always the same. I don't know why - somebody else will have to just

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 12:28:40 -0500 "Nelson Castillo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2/19/06, Henrique Rennó <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello!!! > > > > I have a line in /etc/inittab like this: > > id:3:initdBuefault: > > > > Level 3 is for the system to boot in shell login, but my system is >

Re: Configuring inittab

2006-02-19 Thread Nelson Castillo
On 2/19/06, Henrique Rennó <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello!!! > > I have a line in /etc/inittab like this: > id:3:initdBuefault: > > Level 3 is for the system to boot in shell login, but my system is > going directly to a x login screen (like level 5). > > Is there something else I have to set t