On Wed, 14 Dec 2016, Philipp Kern wrote:
On 12/14/2016 09:40 PM, van Sleeuwen, Berry wrote:
Maybe I'm wrong but to me all things within /etc/init.d/ would be the
easiest to get the overview of what is executed during boot.
It wasn't. /etc/rc2.d maybe, but then it turned out that there's also
/etc/inittab and /etc/rcS.d.
The actual runlevel init scripts reside in /etc/init.d/, and the different
single user (1) and multiuser runlevels (2-5) would initialize different
services per runlevel by symlinking to the actual scripts. rc0 is off, and
rc6 is reboot. Simple. The scripts in /etc/rcS.d run first, and
/etc/rc.local runs after everything else. Handy. /etc/inittab defines the
serial console behavior and default init run level, among other things,
and reading the comments therein on most systems will tell you all you
need to know to figure out the rest of the init system.
Now you get systemd-analyze.
Nah, I will stick with my cat, thanks.
Kind regards
Philipp Kern
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