10-22-2010
1 and s is the same... S is something other... read the link to the end.
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1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have written a daemon and want to make sure that it starts up again after the machine is re-started so I can quit manually doing it. Problem is I'm having difficulty understanding what to do with the init.d
Any help would be appreciated! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: BC_Kevin
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2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi Expert,
I have encountered some problem with my SUN system. Everytime when i issue command #init 6 OR #init 0 it just logout and prompt for login again instead of rebooting the server when run init 6 and system shutdown when run init 0..
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3. Solaris
root@test09 # ls -al /sbin/init
-r-xr-xr-x 1 root sys 550000 Jun 29 2002 /sbin/init
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4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I know if a parent process exits before its child, the last one becomes orphan for a while and then is added to the children of Init process.
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2 how init knows that from a some point on it has another child.
Thank you in advance. (2 Replies)
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5. Linux
Dear all,
I typed in init 1 on my redhat box as root and according to wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runlevel):
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6. Red Hat
What is the difference between 'init s' and 'init 1'.
I know that both will work to change the current run level to single user mode.
Is there any difference in those two commands? (5 Replies)
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7. Solaris
Hi,
Can somebody please tell me the difference between the files in /etc/rc2.d and those in /etc/init.d? I am asking because on one system, I got a sysedge file S99.sysedge under /etc/rc2.d and it has a soft link to the /etc/init.d/sysedge.
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8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I am experiencing a weird thing on my SUNFIRE machine with Solaris 9 OS.
When I do init 0 to shutdown the machine to go to ok prompt, what it did was shutdown and reboot like an init 6 command do. I did check the corresponding rc scripts that were involved with init 0 and compared with rc... (2 Replies)
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9. Red Hat
I encountered a problem on one of our database servers.
OS: CentOS 5.5 final
Kernel: 2.6.18-238.5.1.el5.028stab085.2 (OpenVZ kernel)
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LEARN ABOUT HPUX
show_link
show link(1m) show link(1m)
NAME
show link - Displays attribute information about the specified soft link
SYNOPSIS
cdscp show link link-name [attribute-name] [with attribute-name = attribute-value]
ARGUMENTS
The full name of a specific soft link. The last simple name can contain wildcard characters. The name of a particular attribute; see
Description for valid attribute names. The value of a particular attribute.
DESCRIPTION
The show link command displays the names and values of the attributes specified in attribute-name. You can use a combination of attributes
in any sequence in a single command. Use a space to separate multiple attributes. You can use a with attribute-name = attribute-value
clause to limit output only to soft links whose attributes have values equal to the specified values. A space must precede and follow the
= (equals sign). If you do not supply any attributes, the command displays all attributes and their values. The following is a description
of soft link attributes: Specifies the creation timestamp (CTS) of this soft link Specifies the full name of the directory, object entry,
or other soft link to which the soft link points Specifies a timeout value after which the soft link is either checked or deleted Specifies
the timestamp of the most recent update to an attribute of the soft link
Privilege Required
You must have read permission to the soft link. If you specify a wildcard soft link name, you also need read permission to the directory
that stores the soft link.
NOTE
This command is replaced at Revision 1.1 by the dcecp command and may not be provided in future releases of DCE.
EXAMPLE
The following command displays the current values of all the attributes associated with the soft link /.:/sales/region1. cdscp> show link
/.:/sales/region1
SHOW
SOFTLINK /.../abc.com/sales/region1
AT 1991-10-15-15:54:40
CDS_CTS = 1991-10-15-19:54:35.00000003/08-00-2b-1c-8f-1f
CDS_UTS = 1991-10-15-19:54:35.00000006/08-00-2b-1c-8f-1f
CDS_LinkTarget = /.../abc.com/sales/service
SHOW
SOFTLINK /.../abc.com/sales/region1
AT 1991-10-15-15:54:41
CDS_CTS = 1991-10-15-19:54:36.00000077/08-00-2b-1c-8f-1f
CDS_UTS = 1991-10-15-19:54:36.00000009/08-00-2b-1c-8f-1f
CDS_LinkTarget = /.../abc.com/sales/software
CDS_LinkTimeout = :
Expiration = 1991-10-15-00:00:00.0
Extension = +1-00:00:00.000
RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: create link(1m), delete link(1m), list link(1m), remove link(1m), set link(1m)
show link(1m)