Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | # |
| 2 | # Defaults for the boot scripts in /etc/rcS.d |
| 3 | # |
| 4 | |
| 5 | # Time files in /tmp are kept in days. |
| 6 | TMPTIME=0 |
| 7 | # Set to yes if you want sulogin to be spawned on bootup |
| 8 | SULOGIN=no |
| 9 | # Set to no if you want to be able to login over telnet/rlogin |
| 10 | # before system startup is complete (as soon as inetd is started) |
| 11 | DELAYLOGIN=no |
| 12 | # Assume that the BIOS clock is set to UTC time (recommended) |
| 13 | UTC=yes |
| 14 | # Set VERBOSE to "no" if you would like a more quiet bootup. |
| 15 | VERBOSE=no |
| 16 | # Set EDITMOTD to "no" if you don't want /etc/motd to be edited automatically |
| 17 | EDITMOTD=no |
| 18 | # Whether to fsck root on boot |
| 19 | ENABLE_ROOTFS_FSCK=no |
| 20 | # Set FSCKFIX to "yes" if you want to add "-y" to the fsck at startup. |
| 21 | FSCKFIX=yes |
| 22 | # Set TICKADJ to the correct tick value for this specific machine |
| 23 | #TICKADJ=10000 |
| 24 | # Enable caching in populate-volatile.sh |
| 25 | VOLATILE_ENABLE_CACHE=yes |
| 26 | # Indicate whether the rootfs is intended to be read-only or not. |
| 27 | # Setting ROOTFS_READ_ONLY to yes and rebooting will give you a read-only rootfs. |
| 28 | # Normally you should not change this value. |
| 29 | ROOTFS_READ_ONLY=no |