cd /sbin/init.d ./smb
To start SMB you need: "./smb start" To stop SMB you need: "./smb stop" the same is true for most other scripts in /sbin/init.d
Joseph Beaman wrote:
OK, this may seem like a dumb question, but please bear with me as I am new to Linux. Now, my understanding is that any program, script, etc can be directly executed from the command line provided that ther permissions are set up with the 'x' attribute. Now, I am using SUSE Linux 5.2, and I am trying to execute smb, from the /sbin/init.d directory. It is a script with the x attribute set, and I am logged in as root. I can do a less on it, but when I try to execute it, I get bash:Command not found. It is not this file only that I have trouble with either--many are like this. What am I doing wrong?
- To get out of this list, please send email to majordomo@suse.com with this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e