Geoff,

Ordinarily, I'd say "man telinit".  Except, of course, AIX has
been continually making the online documentation more and more
of a pain for old-school Unix folks to use.  </gripe>

You're looking for "telinit q".  This tells the init command to
re-examine the /etc/inittab file.  It's standard SysV behavior.

=Dave

Gill, Geoffrey L. wrote:
>
> For all you AIX guru's out there,
>
> I haven't been able to find an answer to this in any of the books I have so
> I need to ask. I've been told that on other UNIX systems there is a way to
> "refresh" what's in inittab to the system. In AIX is there a way to have the
> inittab re-run to pick up any changes or processes that may have been
> stopped without restarting the computer?


--
Hello World.                                    David Bronder - Systems Admin
Segmentation Fault                                     ITS-SPA, Univ. of Iowa
Core dumped, disk trashed, quota filled, soda warm.   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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