Shutdown command:
1. Halt Shut down immediately
2. Poweroff Shut down immediately
3. Shutdown -h now Shut down immediately (for root users)
4. Shutdown -h 10 Automatically shut down after 10 minutes
If it is set through the shutdown command If shutting down, you can use the shutdown -c command to cancel the restart
Restart command:
1, reboot
2, shutdown -r now Restart immediately (for root user)
3, shutdown -r 10 Automatically restart after 10 minutes (root user) Use)
4. shutdown -r 20:35 Restart when the time is 20:35 (for root users)
If the restart is set through the shutdown command, you can use the shutdown -c command to cancel the restart
shutdown parameter description:
[-t] Before changing to other runlevels? Tell init how long to shut down after.
[-r] Restart the calculator.
[-k] Doesn’t really shut down? It just sends a warning signal to each login [login].
[-h] Turn off the power after shutdown [halt].
[-n] Don’t use init? Instead, shut down the computer yourself. Not encouraged to use this option? And the consequences of this option are often not always what you expect
.
[-c] cancel current process Cancel the shutdown process currently being executed. So of course this option has no time parameter, but you can enter a message to explain it, and this message will be sent to each user.
[-f] Ignore fsck when restarting the calculator [reboot].
[-F] Force fsck when restarting the calculator [reboot].
[-time] Set the time before shutdown [shutdown]
[-n] Prevent sync system call? It is used after patching the root partition with fsck? Prevents the kernel from overwriting the patched
superblock with an older version of the superblock.
[-w] Isn’t it a real reboot or shutdown? It just writes wtmp [/var/log/wtmp] records.
[-d] Do not write wtmp records [included in option [-n]].
[-f] Force shutdown or restart without calling shutdown.
[-i] Before shutting down (or restarting)? Turn off all network interfaces.
[-p] This option is the default option. Just call poweroff when shutting down.
3.reboot
The working process of reboot is almost the same as halt. But it causes the host to restart, while halt is to shut down. Its parameters are similar to halt.
line:
# Trap CTRL-ALT-DELETE ca::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t3 -r now
You can - The r option is changed to -h, and the modified command is as follows:
# Trap CTRL-ALT-DELETE ca::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t3 -h now
When modifying the file, register as root. Behavioral comment lines starting with "#" describe the script file and are not processed by the computer.
Comment statement. The root user can also use the shutdown command to shut down. The shtudown command can be executed locally or remotely. When the system is locked
and the keyboard cannot be used, the shutdown command can be executed through remote registration
[ Kill unavailable processes] or execute the command /sbin/shutdown -rn nowThe shutdown command skips some standard and very time-consuming shutdown steps. This command runs faster. This command is used when a problem occurs in the system.
This is useful when answering questions (the option -n causes the system to kill all processes before restarting).
Please pay attention to the above command usage process. For security reasons, it is not possible to register directly as root (for example, using telnet ) to the remote host. You can only register as a normal user, and then use the su command to turn yourself into a super user. The shutdown command can also shut down the host after a period of time. For example, execute the following command as root :
$ /sbin/shutdown -r 23:59
will cause the host to restart at 23:59. If the shutdown seems too long for you, you can use the following two commands: reboot and halt. Their functions
can, as its name suggests, restart the computer and shut down respectively.
For example The following command will shut down the system.
For different run level definitions, please refer to the file /etc/inittab. net!