On Monday 05 November 2001 18:17, Karol Pietrzak wrote:
Two solutions:
A. I think you may have screwed up your /etc/inittab. SuSEconfig, I believe, can fix it. Boot into runlevel 1 (single user mode) and make sure CHECK_INITTAB is set to yes in /etc/rc.config. Then run 'SuSEconfig' and you should be fine.
B. This is the hands-on approach, maybe the faster one. Boot into single user mode and check your /etc/inittab. In the beginning will be line like so:
id:3:initdefault:
Or in your case, I believe:
id:6:initdefault:
Change this to:
id:5:initdefault:
Thanks for your suggestions but I had no luck . CHECK_INITTAB is set to yes. The default line in inittab is: # default runlevel id:5:initdefault: I had replaced /etc/inittab with the original when I was able to access my files. Attached is the file I am using. Maybe I missed something. If you have any other suggestions please fire away. I've been in this mess for three weeks! Jack Reilly aa6vn@pacbell.net * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *