also the runlevels are different. On Debian you find a full functional working system at runlevel 2. that's not the case with dists like RH. For slack I'd heard it's based on the init structure of the BSD's.
inittab runlevels may differ from distro to distro
# These are the default runlevels in Slackware: # 0 = halt # 1 = single user mode # 2 = unused (but configured the same as runlevel 3) # 3 = multiuser mode (default Slackware runlevel) # 4 = X11 with KDM/GDM/XDM (session managers) # 5 = unused (but configured the same as runlevel 3) # 6 = reboot
The rc.d initscript structure of slackware is a lot more bsd-ish as you say ...
srs
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