Depends on the distribution and version.
Basically, /etc/inittab will list the initial file that the init process
runs. Depending on the distribution, it might be in /etc,
/etc/rc.d,/etc/init.d, or /sbin/rc.d (have I missed any common possibilities?).
A typical inittab first runs a file in single-user mode (normally
/some_path/rcS), then a multiuser-mode file. In most cases, it (the second
file) is actually called by way of a symlink that depends on the default
runlevel (also set in /etc/inittab). Each of these initial files in turn
calls other files.
At 09:22 PM 4/6/00 +0400, V.Vasant wrote:
> hi,
> Can someone tell me what's the equivalent of config.sys on Linux
>,what I think is some file in /etc/rc.d directory ,but which??
------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
Ray Olszewski -- Han Solo
Palo Alto, CA [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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