SysVinit (predecessor)
[/sɪs.vi.ɪnɪt/ (SIS-vee-init)]
noun
SysVinit (antecessor)
1. A System V-style init system that serves as the predecessor to modern init systems like systemd; a traditional Unix/Linux process initialization and management system
SysVinit was the standard init system for most Linux distributions before systemd became dominant.
O SysVinit foi o sistema init padrão para a maioria das distribuições Linux antes do systemd se tornar dominante.
2. The legacy boot and service management framework used in traditional Unix systems and early Linux kernels
Many system administrators learned Linux administration using SysVinit runlevels and init scripts.
Muitos administradores de sistemas aprenderam administração Linux usando níveis de execução do SysVinit e scripts init.
SysVinit represents a significant part of Unix/Linux history and is still relevant in discussions about system administration, though most modern distributions have migrated to systemd. The term is used primarily in technical and academic contexts among software engineers and system administrators.
Look up more words on Fala2Me
The free English-Portuguese dictionary with real Brazilian accents, NYC slang, conjugator and more
Open Fala2Me →