Re: [Ltsp-discuss] booting with a different init runlevel

2004-01-08 Thread Phil Davey
> > How do you pass a run level to init when booting a ltsp kernel? On Wed, 7 Jan 2004 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Or, another method would be to pass an argument on the kernel command > line, maybe something descriptive like 'FIXWIN=Y'. I've used this method (I think!) and I've tried to explain

Re: [Ltsp-discuss] booting with a different init runlevel

2004-01-07 Thread jam
On Thu, 8 Jan 2004, Norman Gaywood wrote: > On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 11:00:07PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > You'd need to modify the /linuxrc script in the initrd image to pass > > the runlevel from the commandline on to the /sbin/init program. > > This would be the most elegant way IMHO.

Re: [Ltsp-discuss] booting with a different init runlevel

2004-01-07 Thread Norman Gaywood
On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 11:00:07PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > You'd need to modify the /linuxrc script in the initrd image to pass > the runlevel from the commandline on to the /sbin/init program. This would be the most elegant way IMHO. It would be a small change yet add considerable flexi

Re: [Ltsp-discuss] booting with a different init runlevel

2004-01-07 Thread jam
Norman, You'd need to modify the /linuxrc script in the initrd image to pass the runlevel from the commandline on to the /sbin/init program. Or, another method would be to pass an argument on the kernel command line, maybe something descriptive like 'FIXWIN=Y'. This would get passed as an envi

[Ltsp-discuss] booting with a different init runlevel

2004-01-07 Thread Norman Gaywood
I'm using ltsp4. How do you pass a run level to init when booting a ltsp kernel? Here is my setup: 1. Workstation uses dhcp and tftp to boot nbgrub. 2. nbgrub provides a menu with choices: Linux Terminal (ltsp) windows on local disk The nbgrub entry for the