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Applies to openSUSE Leap 15.7

Part II System Edit source

8 32-bit and 64-bit applications in a 64-bit system environment

9 Introduction to the boot process

Booting a Linux system involves different components and tasks. After a firmware and hardware initialization process, which depends on the machine's architecture, the kernel is started by the boot loader GRUB 2. After this point, the boot process is controlled by the operating system and handled by systemd. systemd provides a set of targets that boot configurations for everyday usage, maintenance or emergencies.

10 The systemd daemon

11 journalctl: query the systemd journal

12 The boot loader GRUB 2

This chapter describes how to configure GRUB 2, the boot loader used in openSUSE® Leap. A YaST module is available for configuring the most important settings. The boot procedure as a whole is outlined in Chapter 9, Introduction to the boot process. For details on Secure Boot support for UEFI machines, see Chapter 14, UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface).

13 Basic networking

Linux offers the necessary networking tools and features for integration into all types of network structures. Network access using a network card can be configured with YaST. Manual configuration is also possible. In this chapter, only the fundamental mechanisms and the relevant network configuration files are covered.

14 UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface)

15 Special system features

This chapter starts with information about specific software packages, the virtual consoles and the keyboard layout. We talk about software components like bash, cron and logrotate, because they were changed or enhanced during the last release cycles. Even if they are small or considered of minor importance, users should change their default behavior, because these components are often closely coupled with the system. The chapter concludes with a section about language and country-specific settings (I18N and L10N).

16 Dynamic kernel device management with udev

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