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startup services

This is a discussion on startup services within the Slackware Linux Support forums, part of the Unix Operating Systems category; --> William Hunt wrote: > On Mon, 1 Mar 2004, Douglas Gardiner wrote: >> William Hunt wrote: >>> On Mon, ...


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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 02-19-2008, 09:04 AM
Douglas Gardiner
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: startup services

William Hunt wrote:

> On Mon, 1 Mar 2004, Douglas Gardiner wrote:
>> William Hunt wrote:
>>> On Mon, 1 Mar 2004, Ruud wrote:
>>>> were can i find the script for stopping services by boot
>>>> i use slackware 9.0
>>>
>>> The various scripts used to configure your machine
>>> (at the end of the normal installation procedure)
>>> are store in the diretory, /var/log/setup/
>>> The script you want is called, conveniently,
>>> setup.services.
>>> you need root permissions and to be in the / directory:
>>> % su root
>>> (passwd)
>>> # cd /
>>> # setup.services
>>>

>> Not in slackware.

>
> wellllll, it's in slackware 9.1 anyway. also with 9.1 it's a
> selection off the pkgtools menu. i'm not sure when that was
> introduced - but right, slackware 8.1 doesn't have any
> setup.services script. evolution in progress.
>
>> They are in the /etc/rc.d directory. Such files rc.M to
>> start with, as they show the other scripts they call.

> [...]
>> stuff. It's not hard but a little reading is involved.

>
> right ...
>

Probably so since, I'm running 9.0 usually avoid package tools, do it the
old fashioned way. tar make make install pipe stdout to a log file kind of
thing. Guess 9.1 embraces the TIMTOWTDI perl thing now.
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 02-19-2008, 09:13 AM
Nikolay Zhuravlev
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: startup services

On 2004-03-02, Ruud <spammer@spams.nl> wrote:
[skip]

> en can you also tell me how i can see wich services run now
>

For network services, the following two commands are useful (run as
root):

netstat -tupan
lsof -i

The commands are not distrib specific.

--
WBR, Nikolay Zhuravlev
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