In a previous message, Eugene Lee
On Thu, Jun 10, 2004 at 02:08:59PM +0100, John Pettigrew wrote:
you want the Runlevel Editor
Ahhh, how unintuitive for a user-based control panel.
As with most things, it's *very* intuitive when you think the same way as the system (i.e. "when should this daemon be running?"). Don't forget, also, that YaST isn't a user control panel - it's a system configuration tool. This is a very different concept; the giveaway's the need for admin rights for anythiing that YaST does. If you want a user-level panel, you want something like the control centres of KDE or Gnome. Of course, SUSE make sure that YaST plugs into KDE's Control Centre, but that's just a convenience.
So why isn't sshd listed as a network service, like mail and NFS?
Because it's not something that you configure, at a guess. The mail and NFS components of YaST are to configure *how* these things run. You can use the Runlevel editor to control *when* they run in the same way as you did with sshd (although their separate components of course control whether they run as well as how - anything else *would* be confusing!). John -- John Pettigrew Headstrong Games john@headstrong-games.co.uk Fun : Strategy : Price http://www.headstrong-games.co.uk/ Board games that won't break the bank Knossos: escape the ever-changing labyrinth before the Minotaur catches you!