Why would you even care? They are literally background system services that don't drain almost any battery. You can just delete them if you don't use them i guess, otherwise just leave them on.Sys-ftpd-light and sys-con both are activated on startup while others are not(sys-clk) . Since I really don’t use sysmodules often enough it would be nice for those to be off by default. Is there a way to change this behavior for those two sysmodules?
I never said I don’t use them. Why would I even take the time to setup the overlay for them if I didn’t use them? Since these are services that can be toggled on/off on the fly without a reboot. It makes sense to me that they would be set to off by default. It’s just my personal preference if it is deed an option, if not than that’s ok too.Why would you even care? They are literally background system services that don't drain almost any battery. You can just delete them if you don't use them i guess, otherwise just leave them on.
It's because this overlay launches / terminates processes. The boot2.flag is kept intact. Either turn them off with Kosmos Toolbox or manually delete corresponding boot2.flags.They appear just fine in the overlay and I can turn them off and on at will. My question is how to make the sysmodules that don’t require a reboot to be toggled off during startup/boot. In other word, turning them on when needed not just constantly running in the background. Example: sys-ftp is on and running on boot/startup. I then turn it off, when I perform reboot sys-ftp is on again. This isn’t a big deal it’s just that I might only use ftp once a month so why have it on by default.
Deleted the boot2.flags to the ones I wanted to be off on startup and it’s working great.It's because this overlay launches / terminates processes. The boot2.flag is kept intact. Either turn them off with Kosmos Toolbox or manually delete corresponding boot2.flags.
Press both sticks in for a few secondsIve enabled the status monitor overlay but cant seem to disable it?
Could you take a look to SimpleModManager.ovl?16.0.0 support