Damon Register said the following on 04/11/2013 10:24 AM:
I didn't really notice anything different in the YaST runlevel setting. Do I understand correctly there is a significant departure or shift in use of runlevel or how it works? Is there anyone who can help me understand this discussion?
It depends on whether your system is running with systemd or sysvinit. You can use zypper (or rpm) to what/which is installed. Systemd has a backward compatibility function so commands such as init 3 and init 5 still appear work. Many things that still appear to exist under /etc/init.d are actually 'aliased' to their systemd equivalents. For the ordinary user, so long as there are no hardware problems, it should be the same old "turn it on, wait a bit and see the login screen". Unless you're specifically interested, in which case there is a vast amount of documentation, there's little reason to look "under the hood". -- HTTP is like being married: you have to be able to handle whatever you're given, while being very careful what you send back. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org