\_ ugh.. this has got to stop...
\_
\_ Most distro's keep startup scripts in /etc/rc.d (some are rc<runlevel>.d).
\_ Assuming that the first is true, there should be dir's under that which
\_ indicate the runlevel (see below) and contain some oddly named scripts:
\_
\_ scripts starting with S are startup scripts
\_ scripts starting with K are shutdown scripts
\_
\_
\_ There are numbers after the S or K to indicate the order in which they
\_ should be executed. You will mainly be interested in runlevels 2 or 3 (check
\_ man init for your systems details). If you don't want a deamon to start,
\_ remove it from the dir.
\_
\_ Also, some systems have scripts that start with a P wich means that they run
\_ in parrallel (they don't wait for the previous script to finish before the
\_ next one starts).
RH handles 'P' by assigning the same start number to the commands.
You also overlooked runlevel 5, which *I* tend to think of as the most
productive. :-)
David