Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Everything
2
init (thing)
See all of init
, there are 4 more in this node.
(
thing
)
by
Rancid_Pickle
Sun Nov 26 2000 at 11:55:47
UNIX
system
s (including
HP-UX
,
IRIX
,
Linux
and
Solaris
flavors) all use the
init
command to set the
initialization
process.
init 0
Shut down the entire system to a halted state. Basically powers off the system or
PROM
monitor mode.
init 1
Places the machine into
admin
mode. All file systems are accessible, but only a
superuser
console
can access the system.
init 2
Normal multiuser
mode
.
init 3
Normal
multiuser
mode with remote file sharing.
init 4
Custom user-defined multiuser environment. In HP-UX, the
VUE
is loaded.
init 5
Shut down
the system like
init 0
but do not power off.
init 6
Shut down the machine and restart as
init 2
or
3
.
init a,b,c
Not a true init state, but allows
program
s to be set to run.
init S,s
Normal single-user mode. This mode is the default should the
inittab
be missing or corrupted.
init Q,q
Do not change init levels, but re-examine the
inittab
file. This way you can use changes without
reboot
ing.
run levels
Ack! I forgot my root password!
System V Init
chmod
Zombie process
initrd
Aiee, killing interrupt handler!
Parameter RAM
BSD
startup-sequence
Extension
FreeBSD jail
getty
Apple Menu
xdm
kdm
gdm
Enumerate
Finder
Unicode Middle Eastern Scripts
EIPT
initscript
Commodore code to cause seizures in the infirm
George Washington's 1796 State of the Union Address