Hi,
acctually there is no specific boot process.
if you want to know exactly when your system hat completed booting you may add an additional entry to your init scripts
for ex.
/etc/init.d/endboot
this will start a sllep process in backgroud which you will see for 1 hour in you process list (ps). the execution time is the exactly when your system has finished booting
if you need detailed information on your system boot see "Bootchart"
my redhat 9 will not boot. We had a power failure and when the power came back, my redhat linux will not boot.
The machine come up to grub prompt.
I tried the following from grub prompt
root (hd0, then press tab key
partition num:0 filesystem type unknown, partition type 0x83... (7 Replies)
i have linux bootable cd.
I want similar bootalbe cd with some chnage in the disk. i.e, some file from the old cd has to replaced in newer one.
how do i do it? (3 Replies)
I am running linux red hat and I need to know the command to view the boot up process.... (that is the driver initialization, drive mount, etc).... Does anyone know this command? (7 Replies)
I'm trying to install Fedora 9 on a Dell OptiPlex GX300 machine. The instalation runs properly, but when the computer restarts after the instalation, it simply won't boot, like there's no OS installed.
I tried diffrent Linux distributions, but nothing works.
This are the partitions, maybe it's... (12 Replies)
Hello all
I have a script but I failed on the creation of
Script is any is carried out in the shell sends the owner of the server, the message is has been implemented
For example, functioned as a detection system intruders but in smaller
Is it possible to help if you allow
I want the... (4 Replies)
Hey, for the purpose of a research project I need to know if a specific type of parallel processing is being utilized by any user-run programs. Is there a way to detect whether a program either returns a value to another program at the end of execution, or just utilizes any form of parallel... (4 Replies)
Microsoft to stop Linux, older Windows, from running on Windows 8 PCs | ZDNet
isn't that deserve an anti trust investigation?
MS monopoly is transfer into the hardware. (1 Reply)
STARTPAR(8) System Manager's Manual STARTPAR(8)NAME
startpar - start runlevel scripts in parallel
SYNOPSIS
startpar [-p par] [-i iorate] [-t timeout] [-T global_timeout] [-a arg] prg1 prg2 ...
startpar [-p par] [-i iorate] [-t timeout] [-T global_timeout] -M [ boot|start|stop]
DESCRIPTION
startpar is used to run multiple run-level scripts in parallel. The degree of parallelism on one CPU can be set with the -p option, the
default is full parallelism. An argument to all of the scripts can be provided with the -a option. Processes blocked by pending I/O will
cause new process creation to be weighted by the iorate factor 800. To change this factor the option -i can be used to specify another
value. The amount weight=(nblockedxiorate)/1000 will be subtracted from the total number of processes which could be started, where
nblocked is the number of processes currently blocked by pending I/O.
The output of each script is buffered and written when the script exits, so output lines of different scripts won't mix. You can modify
this behaviour by setting a timeout.
The timeout set with the -t option is used as buffer timeout. If the output buffer of a script is not empty and the last output was timeout
seconds ago, startpar will flush the buffer.
The -T option timeout works more globally. If no output is printed for more than global_timeout seconds, startpar will flush the buffer of
the script with the oldest output. Afterwards it will only print output of this script until it is finished.
The -M option switches startpar into a make(1) like behaviour. This option takes three different arguments: boot, start, and stop for
reading .depend.boot or .depend.start or .depend.stop respectively in the directory /etc/init.d/. By scanning the boot and runlevel direc-
tories in /etc/init.d/ it then executes the appropriate scripts in parallel.
FILES
/etc/init.d/.depend.boot
/etc/init.d/.depend.start
/etc/init.d/.depend.stop
SEE ALSO init(8)insserv(8).
COPYRIGHT
2003,2004 SuSE Linux AG, Nuernberg, Germany.
2007 SuSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany.
AUTHOR
Michael Schroeder <mls@suse.de>
Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Werner Fink <werner@suse.de>
Jun 2003 STARTPAR(8)