[CentOS] /etc/inittab

2013-11-05 Thread Wes James
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

Re: [CentOS] /etc/inittab

2013-11-05 Thread Wes James
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

Re: [CentOS] /etc/inittab

2010-05-19 Thread John Doe
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 =

Re: [CentOS] /etc/inittab

2010-05-18 Thread Negative
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

[CentOS] /etc/inittab not loaded properly

2009-10-08 Thread ahmad riza h nst
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