* Aliaga, Alberto <Alberto.Aliaga@cwe.cwplc.com> (Fri, Aug 30, 2002 at 02:18:51PM +0200)
Hello list,
I have always thought that the stop scripts linked in /etc/init.d/rc<x>.d as "/etc/init.d/rc3.d/S01httpd" are called by init.d when the system enter in the corresponding runlevel ( in example, when system switchs to runlevel 3). Although I have been revising the man documentation about init.d in a Suse 7.3 and I find the next:
SXXxxxxx are Start script KXXxxxxx are the stop scripts. stop scripts are called when *LEAVING* a run level
Does anyone clear up me this subject ?. I think that in Red Hat distributions, the stop scripts in a certain runlevel are called when system enter in that runlevel.
likely there is a corresponding STOP script (e.g. K01httpd) in the runlevel you are leaving, or you are looking at S01httpd in which case it is a START script
Currently listening to: Ministry - Filthpigreload - Filthpig Gerhard, <@jasongeo.com> == The Acoustic Motorbiker == -- __O Boggies are an unattractive but annoying people whose numbers have =`\<, decreased rather precipitously since the bottom fell out of the (=)/(=) fairy-tale market. Slow and sullen, and yet dull, they prefer to live simple lives of pastoral squalor. --- Bored of the Rings.