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- For Puppy 4.1+
- --------------
- Firewall:
- When the firewall is installed, it will be in /etc/rc.d
- folder as "rc.firewall" and the file "rc.local" will
- have an entry to start it.
- "rc.local" is called from "rc.sysinit".
- Startup:
- When Puppy boots, the order of execution of the
- scripts is (except for a full-hd installation and UniPup):
- /init (in the initial ramdisk)
- switch_root occurs, some content of / relocates to /initrd
- and the following scripts then executed:
- /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit
- Called from rc.sysinit:
- /etc/rc.d/rc.update
- /etc/rc.d/rc.network (as a parallel process)
- /etc/rc.d/rc.services (as a parallel process)
- /etc/rc.d/rc.country
- /etc/rc.d/rc.local (created by rc.sysinit if doesn't exist)
-
- /etc/profile
- Puppy doesn't use runlevels.
- Note, the only script listed above that is not user-editable is init,
- as this is pristine out of initrd.gz.
- Full-hd installation
- --------------------
- An exception to the above description is a full hard drive installation.
- In that case, initrd.gz is not used, and there is no pivot_root and no
- /initrd folder. This mode has PUPMODE=2.
- The above sequence is still correct, except that the Busybox /sbin/init
- is the first thing that executes, then rc.sysinit, etc.
- UniPup
- ------
- UniPup is a variant of Puppy that runs totally in the initramfs.
- The execution sequence is essentially the same as for the full-hd
- installation.
- In this case, the first script that executes is /init but this is just
- a symlink to /bin/busybox. Then it is rc.sysinit and as shown above.
- Note1: /etc/rc.d/functions is from Slackware. Some service scripts in /etc/init.d/
- may use it.
- Note2: /etc/rc.d/functions4puppy4 are various functions needed by Puppy boot
- scripts, pup_event_backend* and pup_event_frontend* scripts.
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