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Full Discussion: Linux booting options
Operating Systems Linux Debian Linux booting options Post 302743467 by caleb8 on Wednesday 12th of December 2012 10:57:02 PM
Old 12-12-2012
Linux booting options

Here is my question, a few years back I was sitting in an airplane and saw the movie display for all the passengers in the back of all the seats boot up. You could see the all too familiar boot-up-scrolling text that we are all used to with Linux. But probably only a few other folks on the plane could have recognized the Linux aspect of the entertainment system because it booted directly to the airlines proprietary movie software package.

I know lots of folks use Linux for all sorts of stuff out in the real world and I have been using Linux for quite some time now. However, I recently came across some work that requires me to boot Linux but not go to a GUI. Instead, I want to go to some other software that I am and will be coding.

So, in other words, I want to boot Debian but then without a keyboard for the user always start up special software. To the user, they may see the Linux-scrolling boot up screen but it really just needs to be a black box for them. And the application won't have a keyboard. So, in a sense, it is a little similar to the on-flight movie example I gave at the beginning.

So there must be someway I can have access to the GUI when need be but the common user just boots up to the specialized software.

This is a bit of a new frontier for me in Linux so any direction or advice is greatly appreciated.

Keep on keeping on my friends.

Caleb.
 

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BOOTP(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  BOOTP(8)

NAME
bootp, rarpd, tftpd - Internet booting SYNOPSIS
ip/bootp [-d] ip/rarpd [-d] [-e etherdev] ip/tftpd [-dr] [-h homedir] DESCRIPTION
These programs support booting over the Internet. They should all be run on the same server to allow other systems to be booted. Bootp and tftpd are used to boot everything; rarpd is an extra piece just for Suns. Bootp passes to Plan 9 systems their IP address, IP mask, default boot file, default file server, default authentication server, and default gateway. These come from the network database file attributes ip, ipmask, bootf, fs, auth, and ipgw attributes respectively (see ndb(6) and ndb(8)). The attributes come from the entry for the system, its subnet, and its network with the system entry having prece- dence, subnet next, and network last. Bootp will answer requests only if it has been specifically targeted or if it has read access to the boot file for the requester. The -d option causes debugging to be printed to standard output. Rarpd performs the Reverse Address Resolution Protocol, translating Ethernet addresses into IP addresses. The options are: d print debugging to standard output e use the Ethernet mounted at /net/etherdev Tftpd transfers files to systems that are booting. It runs as user none and can only access files with global read permission. The options are: d print debugging to standard output h change directory to homedir. The default is /lib/tftpd. All requests for files with non-rooted file names are served starting at this directory with the exception of files of the form xxxxxxxx.SUNyy. These are Sparc kernel boot files where xxxxxxxx is the hex IP address of the machine requesting the kernel and yy is an architecture identifier. Tftpd looks up the file in the network data- base using ipinfo (see ndb(2)) and responds with the boot file specified for that particular machine. If no boot file is specified, the transfer fails. Tftpd supports only octet mode. r restricts access to only files rooted in the homedir. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/ip SEE ALSO
ndb(6) BOOTP(8)
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