On Mon, 06 Dec 2010 11:38:49 -0500, Brunner, Brian T. wrote: [... > The number after the S and K determine the order in which they're run. > S01 starts things which S02-S99 might require; S02 might depend on S01 > and provide service the S03-S99 stuff requires. And, so on. The K > scripts *generally* follow the reverse order on the logic that nothing > is shut down while something else might require it. Therefore a service > with S01 has K99, what is S02 has K98, and so on. > > I'd (personally) guess at the Wild Blue that your Kxx kill script has a > high enough number that it's shutting your app down after something else > has been shut down, on which your app depends, without which your app > throws an exception. That's why (guess based on previous guess) if you > kill your app then shut down, everything is happy. > > General Rule of Thumb: > Sxx -> K(100-xx) > It is K03... Mike. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos