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Date:      Thu, 06 Jan 2005 14:35:22 -0800
From:      Glenn Dawson <glenn@antimatter.net>
To:        "Jorn Argelo" <jorn@wcborstel.nl>, Tom Vilot <tom@vilot.com>, FreeBSD Questions <questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: SCSI Hardware problem?
Message-ID:  <6.0.0.22.2.20050106143410.06f2aa18@cobalt.antimatter.net>
In-Reply-To: <20050106222541.M42982@wcborstel.nl>
References:  <41DDB91C.5000600@vilot.com> <20050106222541.M42982@wcborstel.nl>

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At 02:30 PM 1/6/2005, Jorn Argelo wrote:
> >
> > Oh, one other question ...
> >
> > I'm used to runlevels on Linux. When I reset this machine, I'm
> > presented with the prompt asking me for the default shell (/bin/sh).
> > I hit enter, and I'm in sh where I can fsck the other drives and
> > mount them. Cool. But ....once I have done that, how do I tell BSD
> > to basically "continue" where it left off (i.e. run /etc/netstart
> > sshd, httpd, psqld, zope, etc) without manually invoking each of
> > those items?
>
>I assume you boot in single user mode. I would just reboot the machine again
>and boot normally (multi-user mode) after you're finished with fsck and stuff.

Or you could just exit the shell and the system will continue to boot into 
multi-user mode.

-Glenn

>Cheers,
>
>Jorn
>
> > Thanks in advance.
> >




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