On Sun, Oct 07, 2001 at 06:26:22PM -0500, Michael Grover wrote: > Can Some tell me if there is a link on the debian web site that gives > detailed information on the boot process, like when files get started > from > the init.d directory, etc etc > > mike...
there's a reasonably inaccurate rendition at the newbiedoc project: http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/system/runlevels-intro.html basically, you can trace it yourself by looking in /etc/inittab which -- on initial system startup -- specifies that /etc/init.d/rcS will be called. then, on entering any runlevel (including the initial default, which is also set in /etc/inittab) inittab then refers to /etc/init.d/rc <RUNLEVEL> if you have a look at that script you'll see it calls scripts matching the pattern # KILL services for this runlevel: K??* /etc/rc<RUNLEVEL>.d/K[0-9][0-9]* stop # START services for this runlevel: S??* /etc/rc<RUNLEVEL>.d/S[0-9][0-9]* start those are typically symlinks (see 'man ln') to the actual startup/stop daemon scripts in the /etc/init.d/* directory. to munge them to your heart's content, try update-rc.d (man update-rc.d) unless you want to do things by hand and face the likelihood of breaking things in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. in typical *nix fashion, this question is one you can answer yuorself, AFTER you figure out what to look for, and where to look for it. (and may the force be with you...) -- DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #34 from Martin/madduck <> : How do you click-paste text into VIM WITHOUT AUTOMATIC INDENTING? Vim's ":set noautoindent" isn't enough if you have smartindent or cindent set. Try setting "paste" instead: :set paste before pasting your text, and :set nopaste afterward to restore normal behavior. Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ...