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Operating Systems SCO Starting processes automatically on bootup Post 302252688 by vbe on Thursday 30th of October 2008 06:06:23 AM
Old 10-30-2008
From what I see
You finish booting process at level 2...
So it doesnt make much sence to try at level 8, and I always thought it stopped at 4 (well 6...then the rest are very special options...)
If you want to change the level (like I do...) so that what you configured after standard OS install be launched, you must specify so in another file:
the DEFAULT_LEVEL entry in /etc/default/boot

But its ages since I last touched a SCO... and cant remember much...
 

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Sys::Utmp::Utent(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     Sys::Utmp::Utent(3pm)

NAME
Sys::Utmp::Utent - represent a single utmp entry SYNOPSIS
use Sys::Utmp; my $utmp = Sys::Utmp->new(); while ( my $utent = $utmp->getutent() ) { if ( $utent->user_process ) { print $utent->ut_user," "; } } $utmp->endutent; DESCRIPTION
As described in the Sys::Utmp documentation the getutent method returns an object of the type Sys::Utmp::Utent which provides methods for accessing the fields in the utmp record. There are also methods for determining the type of the record. The access methods relate to the common names for the members of the C struct utent - those provided are the superset from the Gnu implementation and may not be available on all systems: where they are not they will return the empty string. ut_user Returns the use this record was created for if this is a record for a user process. Some systems may return other information depending on the record type. If no user was set this will be the empty string. If tainting is switched on with the '-T' switch to perl then this will be 'tainted' as it is possible that the user name came from an untrusted source. ut_id The identifier for this record - it might be the inittab tag or some other system dependent value. ut_line For user process records this will be the name of the terminalor line that the user is connected on. ut_pid The process ID of the process that created this record. ut_type The type of the record this will have a value corresponding to one of the constants (not all of these may be available on all systems and there may well be others which should be described in the getutent manpage or in /usr/include/utmp.h ) : ACCOUNTING - record was created for system accounting purposes. BOOT_TIME - the record was created at boot time. DEAD_PROCESS - The process that created this record has terminated. EMPTY - record probably contains no other useful information. INIT_PROCESS - this is a record for process created by init. LOGIN_PROCESS - this record was created for a login process (e.g. getty). NEW_TIME - record created when the system time has been set. OLD_TIME - record recording the old tme when the system time has been set. RUN_LVL - records the time at which the current run level was started. USER_PROCESS - record created for a user process (e.g. a login ) for convenience Sys::Utmp::Utent provides methods which are lower case versions of the constant names which return true if the record is of that type. ut_host On systems which support this the method will return the hostname of the host for which the process that created the record was started - for example for a telnet login. If taint checking has been turned on (with the -T switch to perl ) then this value will be tainted as it is possible that a remote user will be in control of the DNS for the machine they have logged in from. ( see perlsec for more on tainting ) ut_time The time in epoch seconds wt which the record was created. BUGS
Probably. This module has been tested on Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD ,SCO Openserver and SCO UnixWare and found to work on those platforms. If you have difficulty building the module or it doesnt behave as expected then please contact the author including if appropriate your /usr/include/utmp.h AUTHOR
Jonathan Stowe, <jns@gellyfish.com> LICENCE
This Software is Copyright Jonathan Stowe 2001-2006 This Software is published as-is with no warranty express or implied. This is free software and can be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
perl. Sys::Utmp::Utent perl v5.14.2 2006-10-13 Sys::Utmp::Utent(3pm)
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