You should not enter them in /etc/inittab! Simple:If you want them to execute immediately after boot before you reach any run-level you should put them in /etc/boot.local. That is probably what you want. More complicated but very efficient: If you want them to execute at a certain run-level you should write a script in /sbin/init.d/ and link it to /sbin/init.d/rcX.d where X is the appropriate runlevel(s). Plural if you want to access the services the script provides at several runlevels. The script should be linked to SYYsomething (the start script) and KZZsomething (the kill script) - where YY and ZZ are numbers between 00 and 99. The principle should be clear if you study the contents of the /sbin/init.d/rcX.d directories. There is a skeleton script that you can use as a model - /sbin/init.d/skeleton. If you want to comply 100% whith the SuSE rc-concept you should also make a link to /usr/sbin and call it rcsomething. Hope this helps Anders %x skrev Daniel Casey:
On SuSE 6.4, where is the correct place to put some commands to run at startup?
Can I put an entry in inittab to run a script that has my commands or is there someplace I can insert the commands directly?
Thanks,
Daniel
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