604 bytes added
, 02:59, 19 June 2011
Most Linux systems have what is called a default runlevel. It goes from 1 to 6.
Typically, runlevel 3 means headless. '''This is the recommendation for Amahi''', if you are not going to use the desktop. This is done to conserve resources, because runlevel 3 does not start graphics (X windows and window managers, etc.), and frees memory and CPU.
The typical default is runlevel 5, which does start X as a service.
=How to change the runlevel=
You can set the default runlevel in
/etc/inittab
It should have a line like this
id:5:initdefault:
That means the system is running at runlevel 5.