How to boot without the X window system?
Gary Stainburn
gary.stainburn at ringways.co.uk
Fri Apr 23 08:47:06 UTC 2004
On Friday 23 April 2004 4:19 am, Rodolfo J. Paiz wrote:
> At 20:59 4/22/2004, you wrote:
> >All consoles are there in /etc/inittab. Console 1 was simply busy running
> >X. The answer was to use CTRL+ALT+Backspace to terminate X.
This bit I don't understand. X normally runs on console 7 onwards (You can
have multiple X sessions running but it's something I've never done).
>
> I missed the start of this thread, but you can also boot into single-user
> mode to edit /etc/inittab by:
>
> 1. Pressing 'c' to customize your startup in GRUB.
> 2. Selecting the line that starts with "kernel" and pressing 'e'
> to edit.
> 3. Appending the word "single" to the kernel line.
> 4. Pressing 'b' to boot.
>
> I may not have that down exactly since I'm not at a console right now, but
> it's close. Once booted into single-user mode, edit /etc/inittab and find a
> line like:
>
> id:5:default
>
> Change that "5" to a "3", then command "init 6" to reboot. The system will
> then come up in runlevel 3 which is the same as 5 but in text-mode... no X
> at all.
You don't need to do the 'init 6' command. You can simply call 'init 3' to
change to runlevel 3 immediately.
Also, 'init 6' is depreciated. You should always use the 'shutdown' command. I
believe it does additional stuff first.
>
> Cheers,
--
Gary Stainburn
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