On Thu, Apr 22, 2004 at 01:48:36AM -0400, Joey Hess wrote: > Branden Robinson wrote: > > IIRC, you generally want to use invoke-rc.d because it is cognizant of > > runlevel policy (i.e., start service $FOO in runlevel 3 but not runlevel > > 2, and so forth). > > That's true of maintainer scripts, but not when a human is driving the > machine and knows that they definitely want xdm started or stopped right > now. > > For example, I have X installed inside a chroot. This chroot has a local > policy-rc.d that prohibits any daemons being started, because I don't > want port conflicts with systems outside the chroot to occur when I > install or upgrade a package. So if I want to manually start xdm or some > other daemon, invoke-rc.d is useless to me. > > Another example: I may be in single user mode, and want to start bind, > so I can do some network administration. invoke-rc.d's default policy > would not let it start. This kind of thing makes invoke-rc.d a poor > choice of software for an admin who wants the compter to do what he > tells it to do. It's name is also longer to type. ;-)
Well, the scope of this discussion is a pair of manpages, xdm.options(5) and xfs.options(5). Do you object to me documenting invoke-rc.d there instead of /etc/init.d? -- G. Branden Robinson | Never attribute to human stupidity Debian GNU/Linux | that which can be adequately [EMAIL PROTECTED] | explained by GNU Libtool. http://people.debian.org/~branden/ | -- Scott James Remnant
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