<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (Saturday, July 27, 2002 1:47 AM)
> No. In Debian, all runlevels are same, unlike in Mandrake or
      ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> Red Hat. I just happened to find it as default, and removed

Care to explain that a bit better?

I don't know debian and wouldn't admin a debian box to save my life, but I
do have a shell on a debian box (courtesy symonds.net).

Lemme see ...

$ cat /etc/debian_version
3.0

/etc/inittab says -

# /etc/inittab: init(8) configuration.
# $Id: inittab,v 1.8 1998/05/10 10:37:50 miquels Exp $
[...]
# /etc/init.d executes the S and K scripts upon change
# of runlevel.
#
# Runlevel 0 is halt.
# Runlevel 1 is single-user.
# Runlevels 2-5 are multi-user.
# Runlevel 6 is reboot.

The inittab manpage on debian does list examples of how to set more detailed
runlevels... am just surprised debian didn't use this flexiblity.

Redhat's initlevels are a rather nice thing IMO.

    -srs



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