> Ok, this is the complete output of a typical install:
>
> PID TT STAT TIME COMMAND
> 1 ? SW 0:01 swapper
> 2 ? SW 0:00 kflushd
> 3 ? SW< 0:00 kswapd
> 4 ? SW 0:00 nfsiod
> 5 ? SW 0:00 nfsiod
> 6 ? SW 0:00 nfsiod
> 7 ? SW 0:00 nfsiod
> 8 1 S 0:01 linuxrc
> 17 ? S 0:00 update (bdflush)
> 18 2 S 0:00 bash
> 20 5 S 0:00 bash
> 21 6 S 0:00 bash
> 24 1 S 0:00 /sbin/YaST
> 42 2 R 0:02 ps -ax
Here's a novel, off-the-wall, and probably totally impossible suggestion:
why not stick init in the initrd, have init be loaded from there, and make
init do special things when it's in an initrd?
-- J. S. Connell | Systems Adminstrator, ICONZ. Any opinions stated above ankh@canuck.gen.nz | are not my employers', not my boyfriends', my God's, my ankh@iconz.co.nz | friends', and probably not even my own. -------------------+--------------------------------------------------------- PGP key at http://www.canuck.gen.nz/~ankh/pgpkey.html