From 6a8552e02f09eaa1c4d091e00e714a56f178d726 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bill Nottingham Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2006 18:17:21 +0000 Subject: quick quiz - which makes more sense, when entering single user mode: - have 'single' start first, kill /etc/rc, and have it shut down all the services by itself - have /etc/rc kill services normally, and just run 'single' last? Yeah, I thought so. --- rc.d/init.d/single | 21 --------------------- 1 file changed, 21 deletions(-) (limited to 'rc.d/init.d/single') diff --git a/rc.d/init.d/single b/rc.d/init.d/single index 64c6806d..0ae9268e 100755 --- a/rc.d/init.d/single +++ b/rc.d/init.d/single @@ -16,30 +16,9 @@ if [ "$1" != "start" ]; then exit 0 fi -rm -f /var/lock/subsys/* - # this looks nicer [ -x /usr/bin/clear ] && /usr/bin/clear -# make sure modprobe is working -if [ -f /proc/sys/kernel/modprobe ]; then - sysctl -w kernel.modprobe="/sbin/modprobe" >/dev/null 2>&1 -fi - -# If they want to run something in single user mode, might as well run it... -for i in /etc/rc1.d/S[0-9][0-9]* ; do - # Check if the script is there. - [ -x "$i" ] || continue - - # Reject backup files and files generated by rpm. - case "$1" in - *.rpmsave|*.rpmorig|*.rpmnew|*~|*.orig) - continue;; - esac - [ "$i" = "/etc/rc1.d/S00single" ] && continue - $i start -done - # Now go to the single user level. echo $"Telling INIT to go to single user mode." exec init -t1 S -- cgit v1.2.1