Mailinglist Archive: opensuse (3261 mails)
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Re: [SLE] The SuSE "boot concept"
- From: Albert Wagner <alwagner@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 3 Apr 2001 22:01:38 -0500
- Message-id: <01040322013800.01652@linux>
Thanks for your reply, Tim. Do you know where I might find some
documentation on just what Yast2 and suseconfig are doing
On Tuesday 03 April 2001 20:15, Timothy R. Butler wrote:
> Hi Albert,
>
> > I sincerely hope that someone can convince me that SuSEConfig is a great
>
> SuSEconfig is GREAT!!!! <g> Seriously, SuSEconfig is more than just a
> boot concept - it's an administration system. SuSEconfig centralizes system
> settings in the rc.config config file, so that YaST2 (or YaST) can change
> the rc.config file and have SuSEconfig distribute the changes throughout
> the entire system.
> This makes it extremely easy even for manual config changes, because you
> can simply open rc.config in PICO or Kedit, or even via YaST or an option
> rc.config editor module for YaST2. I personally think SuSE has the most
> advanced, yet easiest to use configuration system around. It's well worth
> getting use to.
>
> Best,
> Tim
documentation on just what Yast2 and suseconfig are doing
On Tuesday 03 April 2001 20:15, Timothy R. Butler wrote:
> Hi Albert,
>
> > I sincerely hope that someone can convince me that SuSEConfig is a great
>
> SuSEconfig is GREAT!!!! <g> Seriously, SuSEconfig is more than just a
> boot concept - it's an administration system. SuSEconfig centralizes system
> settings in the rc.config config file, so that YaST2 (or YaST) can change
> the rc.config file and have SuSEconfig distribute the changes throughout
> the entire system.
> This makes it extremely easy even for manual config changes, because you
> can simply open rc.config in PICO or Kedit, or even via YaST or an option
> rc.config editor module for YaST2. I personally think SuSE has the most
> advanced, yet easiest to use configuration system around. It's well worth
> getting use to.
>
> Best,
> Tim
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