On 02/09/2012 01:10 PM, dwight at supercomputer.org wrote:
That's incorrect. Init level 2 was the shell. Then networking came
along, and init level 3 was the shell + networking. X came along
later, and was put into init state 5.
Booting into init state 2 is perfectly valid, depending on what you
On 02/09/12 15:19, T.C. Hollingsworth wrote:
You can boot into permissive mode by adding "selinux=permissive" to
the kernel command line. (You can also change to it on the fly by
running `setenforce 0` or change it permanently by editing
/etc/sysconfig/selinux.)
A script run during boot checks
On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 1:07 PM, don fisher wrote:
> On 02/09/12 13:00, James Wilkinson wrote:
>>
>> don fisher wrote:
>>>
>>> I guess I am not sure which level it is. I linked
>>> /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target to
>>> /etc/systemd/system/default.target. It may be level 3. The system
>>> us
On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 12:27 PM, don fisher wrote:
> I guess I am not sure which level it is. I linked
> /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target to
> /etc/systemd/system/default.target. It may be level 3. The system used to
> work until a crash. I restored the system, but something is amiss in the
On Thursday 09 February 2012 01:10:10 pm dwight at supercomputer.org
wrote:
> On Thursday 09 February 2012 10:57:21 am Joe Zeff wrote:
> > On 02/09/2012 10:38 AM, don fisher wrote:
> > > When I boot to level 2 I receive the login prompt.
> >
> > Why are you booting into level 2? In the old, pre-s
On Thursday 09 February 2012 10:57:21 am Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 02/09/2012 10:38 AM, don fisher wrote:
> > When I boot to level 2 I receive the login prompt.
>
> Why are you booting into level 2? In the old, pre-systemd days, a
> complete CLI system without X was level 3; is that what you're
> refer
On 02/09/12 13:00, James Wilkinson wrote:
don fisher wrote:
I guess I am not sure which level it is. I linked
/lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target to
/etc/systemd/system/default.target. It may be level 3. The system
used to work until a crash. I restored the system, but something is
amiss in t
don fisher wrote:
> I guess I am not sure which level it is. I linked
> /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target to
> /etc/systemd/system/default.target. It may be level 3. The system
> used to work until a crash. I restored the system, but something is
> amiss in the login verification.
Did you res
On 02/09/12 11:57, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 02/09/2012 10:38 AM, don fisher wrote:
When I boot to level 2 I receive the login prompt.
Why are you booting into level 2? In the old, pre-systemd days, a
complete CLI system without X was level 3; is that what you're referring
to?
I guess I am not sure
On 02/09/2012 10:38 AM, don fisher wrote:
When I boot to level 2 I receive the login prompt.
Why are you booting into level 2? In the old, pre-systemd days, a
complete CLI system without X was level 3; is that what you're referring to?
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To u
When I boot to level 2 I receive the login prompt. But if I attempt to
login as a user or root the login prompt just returns. I booted into
single user mode and tried to fix the /etc/passwd, /etc/group and
/etc/gshadow. Executing pwconv and grpconv all appear to work. pwck and
grpck also are su
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