On Mon, 2003-06-23 at 04:55, Mateusz Latusek wrote:
> Replace word "respawn" with "once" and see what's happening. Maybe it will
> not restore. If this doesn't help you'll have to trace the script which
> alters inittab. The suspects are /etc/init.d/setserial and ppp.
>
> To disable init.d script,
On 17 Jun 2003, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
> I've tried commenting out this line in /etc/inittab, but when I restart
> the computer, the line is restored to /etc/inittab.
Replace word "respawn" with "once" and see what's happening. Maybe it will
not restore. If this doesn't help you'll have to tr
On Mon, 2003-06-23 at 04:55, Mateusz Latusek wrote:
> Replace word "respawn" with "once" and see what's happening. Maybe it will
> not restore. If this doesn't help you'll have to trace the script which
> alters inittab. The suspects are /etc/init.d/setserial and ppp.
>
> To disable init.d script,
On 17 Jun 2003, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
> I've tried commenting out this line in /etc/inittab, but when I restart
> the computer, the line is restored to /etc/inittab.
Replace word "respawn" with "once" and see what's happening. Maybe it will
not restore. If this doesn't help you'll have to tr
I've got Debian 3.0r1 on my ancient Gateway Solo 2500 laptop (Intel
Celeron chip 300 MHz, 4.0GB HD, 96MB RAM). Now whenever I start up the
computer I get a screen full of error messages regarding the usage of
the getty command, and the notification, "INIT: Id "S" respawning to
I've got Debian 3.0r1 on my ancient Gateway Solo 2500 laptop (Intel
Celeron chip 300 MHz, 4.0GB HD, 96MB RAM). Now whenever I start up the
computer I get a screen full of error messages regarding the usage of
the getty command, and the notification, "INIT: Id "S" respawning to
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