On Sun, 15 Jun 2008 19:25:05 -0400 Bob Barrett <bobbrrtt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I have never before had this kind of problem. The kind where > the developers go off on some experimentation tangent, but > supply so little information for the users. I'm disappointed in > Fedora 9. That's hard to believe: It has been my experience that describes the primary development model for all open source software :-). > /etc/inittab leads off with "inittab is only used by upstart for the default > runlevel." Therefore, it appears that it is used to set the default > runlevel. > > However, according to this forum exchange, it's ignored by upstart. If you look at /etc/event.d/rcS you'll see the code that looks at /etc/inittab to pick up the runlevel. You'll also see that it fails to ignore lines starting with '#' :-). I got all my virtual machines at work to start in runlevel 3 perfectly fine, but I merely changed the 5 to a 3, I didn't comment out the one line and add a new one like you show in your example. You are probably under the mistaken impression that open source projects are intended to be tools people use to get work done - that's not it at all. It is really a large interactive adventure/puzzle game where the only inflexible rule is that if anyone ever figures out how to get useful work done, they have to change it completely right away :-). -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list