Steve Litt: ... Busybox doesn't do what I guess you want, for that you just fire up a process supervisor, there are a few to choose among. Remember busybox init is just a minimal init, everthing else is some other programs responsibility. You can think of busybox init as sysv init but with just one runlevel.
But since you asked: > 1) Does Busybox init require the daemon to background itself? No, just place it last in /etc/rcS, and there can only be one such process. > 2) Does Busybox init give you a reasonable way to automatically restart the > process > after the process terminates? You can run it in its own console, and there you can have it to respawn just like a getty. > 3) Does Busybox init give you the choice of auto-restart or not for each > different > process? If it does, that's something specifically missing in Runit. Yes, start the process either in /etc/rcS or in its own "getty" line. Regards, /Karl Hammar _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng