.tr }. .tr {" .SC UNIX~INITIALIZATION~PROCEDURE September~14~1977 .HU "TO OPEN THE SYSTEM TO MULTIPLE USERS" .L1 If running .I SINGLE-USER: .L2 Do a .B CHECK of the filesystems via .B check (if the filesystems are not clean, refer to FILE PATCHING PROCEDURE). .BS .BI # .UL "check" .BE .L2 Set date to the correct time. .L2 Reboot by changing the position of the .I CSW to any position other than the original setting, and entering .I \d\uCTRL/d \|}\*F .FS Do not do a .I CTRL/d after an .I icheck~-sX of the .I ROOT device; instead the system MUST be halted and completely rebooted. .FE .L1 When running .I MULTI-USER log on as .I "SUPER USER" } .BS - .BI login: .UL "root" .BI password: .UL "!;%&?" ~~~~~~(system will give you a .I # ) .BE If you are running .I "SINGLE-USER" you automatically get back the .I # } .L1 ONLY IF the filesystems are clean, to open the system for general use (i.e., to allow users to log on): .L2 Start .B /ETC/STARTUP } .BS .BI # .UL "startup" .br This command alone will activate the processes for each of the systems. The file ``/etc/startup'' should contain any commands and cleanup to be done on each reboot. .BE .L2 Do a .B "ps a" to make sure .I HASP , .I CRON , .I HASP2 , and .I UVAC (if applicable) are active. .BS .BI # .UL "ps a" .BE .L2 Unbusy the appropriate dial-up lines for each system. .L2 Log-off (\c .I "CTRL/d" \|).