I noticed in /etc/inittab that it has this line:
# 0 - halt (Do NOT set initdefault to this)
It makes sense, but what if it did get set to 0 or 6? Is there a way to
boot to single-user mode anyway to edit the file and change it to a correct
value? What if it is set to a negative number or a
On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 3:24 PM, Warren Young war...@etr-usa.com wrote:
On 11/5/2013 15:10, Wes James wrote:
I noticed in /etc/inittab that it has this line:
# 0 - halt (Do NOT set initdefault to this)
It makes sense, but what if it did get set to 0 or 6? Is there a way to
boot to
From: Thomas Dukes tdu...@sc.rr.com
Where can I get a 5.2, 'stock'
inittab file not in a rpm so I can use a
rescue disk to create this file? Or
if possible, could someone please post
their's for me?
rpm -qf /etc/inittab = initscripts
=
On Tue, May 18, 2010 at 7:22 PM, Thomas Dukes tdu...@sc.rr.com wrote:
Help!
I hosed my system and did a restore from a backup but when I boot, I get an
error no inittab file found.
Where can I get a 5.2, 'stock' inittab file not in a rpm so I can use a
rescue disk to create this file? Or
hi, im new here.
we have servers with centos 4. yesterday one of it crash and cold rebooted.
reboot process run well until finally we found that some of
/etc/inittab configurations doesn't loaded properly, like no virtual
terminal available and svscanboot not executed.
i assumed that these
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