Yes, I turned those runlevels on already and now it works. The problem is that it was a practically default install, that is the way the runlevels were set "out of the box"
3.23.56 was this way after install mysql 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:off 4:on 5:off 6:off 3.23.52 was this way mysql 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:on 4:on 5:on 6:off Was wondering why though. A mistake or for some reason that I am curious about.. -----Original Message----- From: Paul DuBois [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, June 25, 2003 12:13 PM To: Luc Foisy; MYSQL-List (E-mail) Subject: Re: RedHat 9.0 - Mysql 3.23.56 At 10:55 -0400 6/25/03, Luc Foisy wrote: >I installed the RPM version of MySQL 3.23.56 on Red Hat 9.0 >When it installed, it started up mysql, no problems, I could do all >mysql functions >I recently rebooted the box, and mysql did not start automatically. >I can start it if I run /etc/rc.d/init.d/mysql start > >Is there any know problems why this would not be working correctly >with this particular combination? Try: chkconfig --list mysql to see what runlevels the mysql script thinks it's supposed to start for. My guess is that it's not enabled properly. If not, then do this: chkconfig --levels 2345 mysql on -- MySQL General Mailing List For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql To unsubscribe: http://lists.mysql.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]