Thanks for the quick reply. The problem is that seems -t does not work at all.
If you type: shutwodn -t 100 -rk +1; date if your interpretation is correct, the output of date should be current time + 1 minutes + 100 seconds. But the reality is just one minute. A bug of shutdown command? Thanks a lot. On 8/20/07, Jos Vos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 11:29:35AM -0400, siman hew wrote: > > > For example, if I type: > > shutdown -t 30 -r now > > > > I should "feel" I wait about 30 seconds before real rebooting start. > > However, what I got it is that the machine is rebooting right away. > > > > Is anything I missed or misunderstood here? > > If you do "... -t X ... Y", I think Y should be greater than X. > The "now" is leading here (although I've never used -t myself). > > Just my interpretation... > > -- > -- Jos Vos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > -- X/OS Experts in Open Systems BV | Phone: +31 20 6938364 > -- Amsterdam, The Netherlands | Fax: +31 20 6948204 > > _______________________________________________ > rhelv5-list mailing list > [email protected] > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list >
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