This, as far as I know, is actually referring to the feature in Red Hat (and
Red Hat variants, like Mandrake) where you can press 'i'
while init is starting. This allows you to interactively choose which things
you want to run and which you want skipped. To answer
the original question: don'
Michel Loos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> This is the default in Debian (in lilo.conf) but it is not
> necessary, even if the guy in front of the computer types the usual:
> linux single :he will not get root access to your computer without
> knowing the passwd. (At least on testing with a 2.4.x ke
On Tue, Mar 05, 2002 at 12:14:25PM -0300, Michel Loos wrote:
> Em Ter, 2002-03-05 às 11:57, will trillich escreveu:
> > On Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 09:40:48AM -0800, Xeno Campanoli wrote:
> > > In the Trinity OS security recommenation they say to disable the ability
> > > to run init interactively by s
On Tue, 2002-03-05 at 10:14, Michel Loos wrote:
> Em Ter, 2002-03-05 às 11:57, will trillich escreveu:
> > On Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 09:40:48AM -0800, Xeno Campanoli wrote:
> > > In the Trinity OS security recommenation they say to disable the ability
> > > to run init interactively by setting
> > >
Em Ter, 2002-03-05 às 11:57, will trillich escreveu:
> On Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 09:40:48AM -0800, Xeno Campanoli wrote:
> > In the Trinity OS security recommenation they say to disable the ability
> > to run init interactively by setting
> >
> > prompt=no
> >
This is the default in Debian (in lil
On Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 09:40:48AM -0800, Xeno Campanoli wrote:
> In the Trinity OS security recommenation they say to disable the ability
> to run init interactively by setting
>
> prompt=no
>
> in a file called /etc/sysconfig/init, but that file doesn't exist on my
> Debian Potato, and I don't
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