Unless something drastic has changed between SuSe 7.0 and 7.1, the answer to that question is /sbin/init.d. At least that's what the answer is on 7.0. -----Original Message----- From: purpleshirt@hotmail.com [mailto:purpleshirt@hotmail.com] Sent: Sunday, April 01, 2001 12:18 AM To: suse-linux-e@suse.com Subject: [SLE] 7.1 and VMware I was just gonna try VMware. I downloaded the compressed tar version 2.0.3 for Linux hosts. You can't get it to install under 7.1. The question of their perl install script: What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc/init.d The path "/etc/init.d" is a directory which does not contain a init.d directory. What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc The path "/etc" is a directory which does not contain a rc0.d directory. What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? The answer always fails. =( mk _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com -- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/support/faq
Unless something drastic has changed between SuSe 7.0 and 7.1, the answer to that question is /sbin/init.d. At least that's what the answer is on 7.0.
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc/init.d
In SuSE 7.1 they have moved to /etc/init.d because that's what the FHS says it should be (probably a compromise between what SuSE did and what Red Hat did). The scripts themselves are in /etc/init.d itself and the runlevel specifics in /etc/init.d/rcX.d I still havn't worked out what the .d stands for. Jonathan Riddell
participants (2)
-
Cory Steers
-
Jonathan Riddell