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Full Discussion: Init 6 & Init 0 problem
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Init 6 & Init 0 problem Post 82546 by RTM on Friday 2nd of September 2005 08:48:37 AM
Old 09-02-2005
Suggest you look at your init command - First, find out which one you are using
# which init
If it's /usr/sbin/init, then check on another server running the same version of Solaris for the file - check that the patch levels are the same and run a checksum against both init files and compare the output. If they are different, then one may be corrupt (make sure both servers are at the same level of patching)
# sum /usr/sbin/init

Using the shutdown command as suggested by Unbeliever is good advice since the shutdown command is just a script which runs a /sbin/init command at the end of the script.
 

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

NAME
init - initialize machine upon booting SYNOPSIS
/$cputype/init [ -ctm ] [ command ... ] DESCRIPTION
Init initializes the machine: it establishes the name space (see namespace(4) and newns in auth(2)), and environment (see env(3)) and starts a shell (rc(1)) on the console. If a command is supplied, that is run instead of the shell. On a CPU server the invoked shell runs cpurc(8) before accepting commands on the console; on a terminal, it runs termrc and then the user's profile. Options -t (terminal) and -c (CPU) force the behavior to correspond to the specified service class. Otherwise init uses the value of the environment variable $service to decide the service class. Init sets environment variables $service (either to the incoming value or according to -t or -c), $objtype (to the value of $cputype), $user (to the contents of #c/user), and $timezone (to the contents of /adm/timezone/local). With option -m init starts only an interactive shell regardless of the command or service class. On a CPU server, init requires the machine's password to be supplied before starting rc on the console. Init is invoked by boot(8), which sets the arguments as appropriate. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/init.c SEE ALSO
rc(1), auth(2), boot(8) INIT(8)
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