Robert Current <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > One possability: Find the most common run levels in all Linux > distributions, and leave those in place. Then shuffle the rest of > them to fit. For example, if all distributions use 5 for xdm, then > keep 5 as xdm (but Debian doesn't use it that way). If five > distributions have the same run level 4, keep it... etc.
I think this is the best option. If anyone has info on other distributions (Caldera, Pacific Hitech, etc.), please go ahead and post it. > The second possability... > Structure it logically. > Shutdown and Reboot right next to eachother > UnNetworked next to each other > Networked together Hmmm... I don't think this a good option. Run levels 0 (halt) and 6 (reboot) are pretty much carved in stone, at least in documentation and the minds of system administrators. A significant number of people reboot systems using "init 6", for example. > Then, now that I think about it, there is a third possability. Survey > commercial UNIX's, and see what they have most common, and use that? Well, I also looked at Solaris. Linux is much more important. - Dan
