The default runlevel is specified in /etc/inittab. There is no universally accepted runlevel that is specified as the "default." Red Hat and Fedora use 3 or 5, Ubuntu uses 2, Mandriva and SUSE use 5, and Gentoo uses 3. Some (a relatively small number) Linux distros do not use a SysV init style, and thus have no runlevels at all.
The rc scripts which are located ind the /etc/rc.d/init.d. They run via symbolic links in the /etc/rc.d/rcn.d directories, where n is the runlevel the system is entering.
The inittab file contains descriptions of the run states that your system is allowed to assume. Configure it to contain the default runlevels your system will assume when it boots.
Runlevels 0 and 6 should never be set as default.
The /etc/inittab file is a script that controls most of the boot sequence. It dictates what programs and scripts to launch and at what runlevels.
Default scripting language in ASP is VB Script
Script refers to a written text. A script contains the written text of a stage play, movie, or broadcast.
java script
A way to add features that aren't present in the default GIMP installation
With Scripting, you basically script whatever you can... There isn't a selection of default scripts already made... Just insert a script and make your own!
A script is a file that contains a set of commands to be performed. Instead of you manually entering all of the commands into the console, the script is run and does it automatically.
Answer File.
Webpages, either the files by themselves, or through a server-side script.
chkconfig --del bigd