Boot process
From Linuxintro
Revision as of 13:52, 11 January 2014 by imported>ThorstenStaerk (→the init program is started)
How Linux typically starts up on a PC
Contents
- 1 you switch on the computer
- 2 the master boot record is executed
- 3 the boot loader is executed
- 4 the Linux kernel is executed
- 5 the initrd is loaded/executed
- 6 the init program is started
- 7 the init script are executed
- 8 X Windowing system is started
- 9 login manager is started
- 10 user session incl. Desktop environment is started
- 11 See also
you switch on the computer
BIOS is shown and the devices are check
the master boot record is executed
the boot loader is executed
The boot loader is typically grub, and there is an older and smaller called lilo.
the Linux kernel is executed
the initrd is loaded/executed
the init program is started
The Linux kernel starts the init program. Nothing else. If the init process quits, the Linux kernel panics. Init is responsible for all further services and programs that are started.
the init script are executed
This can be SysV init scripts or upstart or systemd. One of them is dbus.