On Oct 30 at 14:07, Mitch Wiedemann spoke: > Assuming your script is /etc/init.d/foo, you would make a symlink thusly: > > ln -s /etc/init.d/foo /etc/rc2.d/S80foo > > What's happening is that the symlinks in /etc/rc2.d/ which start with > the letter "S" followed by a number (00 - 99) are all of the services > which will be started when the boot process enters runlevel 2. > > So, the "S" means "start" (and a "K" means "kill") and the number > following it simply puts it in order in relation to the other symlinks > in rc2.d. So if you want your service to start very late in the > process, you would use S99foo, or S20foo if you want it earlier.
Ok, thanks! So one has to do it by hand. Isn't there a convenience tool like `chkconfig'? -Hanspeter -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]