If you know Win95, you know it has different "modes", like dos-mode, failsafe mode, and normal. This is quite similar to run-levels in linux. There is a number of different modes and each has a number. Runlevel 6 is "shutdown mode", and you never want to set your computer to start up in that runlevel. (It will behave just like a yo-yo - going up and down all the time) Normally you start in the runlevel resembling a dos-mode. If you tell Yast to use a graphical login (xdm or kdm), it will start up in another Runlevel where X-windows will start automagically. Linux also has a "failsafe-mode" this is called single-user mode, and it also has its own runlevel. If you are logged in as root, you can switch the system to another runlevel with the command init <run-level-number>. I can't remember the exact numbers of the different runlevels, but in the Suse Manual there is a section on how to configure them. Ole On Mon, 23 Nov 1998, Phil Sumner wrote:
Being a relative newbie, (sorry.... Linuxly Challenged Person <g>) I am not quite sure about the meaning of runlevels. I have tried to find some explanation but everything seems quite techie... Can anyone give me the newbie-cheat-sheet on the purpose/meaning/whatever of runlevels?
Thanks alot... Phil Sumner -- philip.sumner@stud.umist.ac.uk phil-99@geocities.com
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Runlevel 1= single user mode. Runlevel 2= network/multiuser mode. Runlevel 3= XDM (Xwindows login) mode. Runlevel 6= reboot.
If you know Win95, you know it has different "modes", like dos-mode, failsafe mode, and normal. This is quite similar to run-levels in linux.
There is a number of different modes and each has a number.
Runlevel 6 is "shutdown mode", and you never want to set your computer to start up in that runlevel. (It will behave just like a yo-yo - going up and down all the time)
Normally you start in the runlevel resembling a dos-mode.
If you tell Yast to use a graphical login (xdm or kdm), it will start up in another Runlevel where X-windows will start automagically.
Linux also has a "failsafe-mode" this is called single-user mode, and it also has its own runlevel.
If you are logged in as root, you can switch the system to another runlevel with the command init <run-level-number>.
I can't remember the exact numbers of the different runlevels, but in the Suse Manual there is a section on how to configure them.
Ole
On Mon, 23 Nov 1998, Phil Sumner wrote:
Being a relative newbie, (sorry.... Linuxly Challenged Person <g>) I am not quite sure about the meaning of runlevels. I have tried to find some explanation but everything seems quite techie... Can anyone give me the newbie-cheat-sheet on the purpose/meaning/whatever of runlevels?
Thanks alot... Phil Sumner -- philip.sumner@stud.umist.ac.uk phil-99@geocities.com
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wizard01@impop.bellatlantic.net wrote:
Runlevel 1= single user mode. Runlevel 2= network/multiuser mode. Runlevel 3= XDM (Xwindows login) mode. Runlevel 6= reboot.
I don't want to get picky; because I'm no expert on this stuff; BUT, I think runlevel 1 can have multiple users at the root console, on different <alt-F*> keys. Runlevel 2 justs sets up the ethernet cards and routing. You can go online via modem while in runlevel 1, so technically you have tcp/ip networking in runlevel 1. I'm still working on figuring it all out. - To get out of this list, please send email to majordomo@suse.com with this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e
participants (3)
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k01164@ko.hhs.dk
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wizard01@impop.bellatlantic.net
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zentara@mindspring.com