2fe47a3c9f
no longer needed according to Michael Bunk. Patch from Michael Biebl.
59 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext
59 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING:
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This version of sysvinit is really different from the 2.50 and
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earlier version.
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Shutdown now puts the system into runlevel 6 (reboot), 0 (halt)
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or 1 (single user). This can cause unexpected results if you
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install the binaries from this release into Slackware distributions
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older than Slackware 3.0.
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SUPPORTED DISTRIBUTIONS:
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The binaries from this package can be installed in:
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o Debian 1.3 and later
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o RedHat 3.x and later
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o Slackware 3.0 (UNTESTED but it might work - no complaints yet).
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Also read the INIT.README in the slackware/ directory.
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o Slackware 2.x: see the slackware/ directory
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Do not install any of the scripts from the debian/ directory unless
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you know what you are doing.
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UNSUPPORTED DISTRIBUTIONS:
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o The rest :)
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If you have a non-supported system, please upgrade to the latest version
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of your distribution that supports the Linux 2.0.x kernel (probably
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the reason why you are installing this newer sysvinit).
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You might get away by installing *just* the "init" binary, and nothing
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else. Do _not_ replace your existing halt, reboot or shutdown programs.
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HOW TO NON DESTRUCTIVELY TEST THE NEW INIT:
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Install *just* the init binary as /sbin/init.new. Now reboot the system,
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and stop your bootloader so you can give arguments on the command line.
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With LILO you can usually achieve this by keeping the SHIFT key
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pressed during boot up. Enter the name of the kernel image (for LILO,
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TAB shows a list) followed by the argument "init=/sbin/init.new".
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The name "init.new" is special, do not use something like "init.test".
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For example:
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boot: linux init=/sbin/init.new
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YOU CANNOT SHUTDOWN IN A CLEAN WAY AFTER THIS. Your best bet is to use
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the "-n" flag to shutdown. This is because init is not running as process #1
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if you use this method. Anyway, if this works, you can remove the old init
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and copy the new init into place.
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DISCLAIMER:
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If it breaks you get to keep both pieces. If you want to run the latest
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Linux 2.0.x kernel and you can't get init to work just upgrade your entire
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distribution to a newer version that supports the 2.0.x kernel properly.
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