Brad Tilley wrote:
>This is off-topic and I apologize. However, I think some here could answer
>this.
>
>
>
>>Is there a standard way to start a script or program at boot that will work
>>on any Linux kernel/distro no matter which init system is being used or how it
>>has been configured? Probably not, but I thought someone here could possibly
>>answer this.
>>
>>
You could use the LSB conforming method of writing and installing
an init script:
http://refspecs.freestandards.org/LSB_3.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/iniscrptact.html
http://refspecs.freestandards.org/LSB_3.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/iniscrptfunc.html
http://refspecs.freestandards.org/LSB_3.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/initscrcomconv.html
http://refspecs.freestandards.org/LSB_3.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/initsrcinstrm.html
Most of the main distros support this (Fedora, RHEL, SuSE,
Mandriva, Debian, ...). Not to say all of them ship with the
LSB support packages installed by default. Some do some don't.
On Debian I need to do an "apt-get install lsb".
~mc
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