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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Difference b/w init s and init1 in red hat linux? Post 302668761 by hergp on Tuesday 10th of July 2012 02:40:17 AM
Old 07-10-2012
There are persistent and non-persistent runlevels. Non-Persistent runlevels are only active during a short period of time while the system is changing from one state to another. On RedHat, runlevel 1 is used to bring the system down from multiuser to singleuser mode. When singleuser mode is reached, the runlevel will be S.

See also man 7 runlevel.

In general, the meaning of runlevels is not absolutely fixed. I remember an old unix style OS from Siemens, called Sinix, where runlevel 1 was used for a singleuser mode login on the console, while S gave you a root shell in single user mode on the terminal where you typed the init-command. On Linux, runlevel 5 starts the graphical desktop on the console, while on Solaris, it is used to bring down the system followed by power-off!

Last edited by hergp; 07-10-2012 at 03:41 AM.. Reason: typo
 

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RUNLEVEL(8)							     runlevel							       RUNLEVEL(8)

NAME
runlevel - Print previous and current SysV runlevel SYNOPSIS
runlevel [options...] OVERVIEW
"Runlevels" are an obsolete way to start and stop groups of services used in SysV init. systemd provides a compatibility layer that maps runlevels to targets, and associated binaries like runlevel. Nevertheless, only one runlevel can be "active" at a given time, while systemd can activate multiple targets concurrently, so the mapping to runlevels is confusing and only approximate. Runlevels should not be used in new code, and are mostly useful as a shorthand way to refer the matching systemd targets in kernel boot parameters. Table 1. Mapping between runlevels and systemd targets +---------+-------------------+ |Runlevel | Target | +---------+-------------------+ |0 | poweroff.target | +---------+-------------------+ |1 | rescue.target | +---------+-------------------+ |2, 3, 4 | multi-user.target | +---------+-------------------+ |5 | graphical.target | +---------+-------------------+ |6 | reboot.target | +---------+-------------------+ DESCRIPTION
runlevel prints the previous and current SysV runlevel if they are known. The two runlevel characters are separated by a single space character. If a runlevel cannot be determined, N is printed instead. If neither can be determined, the word "unknown" is printed. Unless overridden in the environment, this will check the utmp database for recent runlevel changes. OPTIONS
The following option is understood: --help Print a short help text and exit. EXIT STATUS
If one or both runlevels could be determined, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. ENVIRONMENT
$RUNLEVEL If $RUNLEVEL is set, runlevel will print this value as current runlevel and ignore utmp. $PREVLEVEL If $PREVLEVEL is set, runlevel will print this value as previous runlevel and ignore utmp. FILES
/run/utmp The utmp database runlevel reads the previous and current runlevel from. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemd.target(5), systemctl(1) systemd 237 RUNLEVEL(8)
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