As root, do shutdown -h now. where now means shutting down the machine
immediately.
For more info, man shutdown.
On Sun, Jul 18, 1999 at 12:50:52PM -0500, André Bell wrote:
Everytime I restart my debian pc after having turned it off debian tells me
at bootup that devices were not unmounted
On 19 Jul, Hans van den Boogert wrote:
|
| shutdown -h now is good. Remember to run it as root.
|
| reboot
|
| KDE comes with KDM which has a shutdown function which ordinary users also
| can invoke. Seems handy for stand alone PCs, but on a network this might
| be
shutdown -h now is good. Remember to run it as root.
reboot
KDE comes with KDM which has a shutdown function which ordinary users also
can invoke. Seems handy for stand alone PCs, but on a network this might
be dangerous. -- Hans
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Andrei Ivanov [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Also check that in /etc/rc.d at the appropriate runlevel you have a umount
script (it's the script that will get executed upon the shutdown to umount
all the partitions).
This should already be in place on a Debian
Patrick == Patrick Kirk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Patrick It is true that its hard to work out how to get the machine
Patrick off in Linux. I use halt...which no-one here suggested. Is
Patrick it not the most logical way to halt a system?
Halt did not sync the disks. If you ask some oldtimers
André Bell wrote:
If so, what is the command to shutdown?
---
shutdown -r now
--
John Foster
AdVance-Computing Systems
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ# 19460173
John Foster [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
André Bell wrote:
If so, what is the command to shutdown?
---
shutdown -r now
That restarts, right? To shut down without rebooting, try
shutdown -h now
For more info try
man shutdown
Everytime I restart my debian pc after having turned it off debian tells me
at bootup that devices were not unmounted properly. I don't use any
commands to shutdown debian, I just use the on/off switch when I'm
finished. Apparantly that is a bad idea.
I'm guessing there must be a way to get
You should always use one of the following (where you need to be root):
$ su -c '/sbin/halt'# To shutdown immediately
$ su -c '/sbin/reboot' # To reboot the machine immediately
$ su -c '/sbin/shutdown other arguments'
# To shutdown or reboot sometime in the future
poweroff
shutdown (with some args, check the man pagesdopn't have my Linux box
infront of me)
reboot
Also check that in /etc/rc.d at the appropriate runlevel you have a umount
script (it's the script that will get executed upon the shutdown to umount
all the partitions).
Andrew
On Sun, 18 Jul 1999, Andrei Ivanov wrote:
poweroff
shutdown (with some args, check the man pagesdopn't have my Linux box
infront of me)
shutdown -h now is good. Remember to run it as root.
reboot
Also check that in /etc/rc.d at the appropriate runlevel you have a umount
script (it's
On Sun, 18 Jul 1999, [iso-8859-1] Andr? Bell wrote:
If so, what is the command to shutdown? Or is it simply cntrl/alt/del to
cause debian to stop everything from running and then turn it off at memory
checking? That's the only way I know how to avoid error messages that say
the system was
*- On 18 Jul, André Bell wrote about Here's an easy question, how shutdown
debian?
Everytime I restart my debian pc after having turned it off debian tells me
at bootup that devices were not unmounted properly. I don't use any
commands to shutdown debian, I just use the on/off switch when I'm
Andri == Andri Bell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Andri Everytime I restart my debian pc after having turned it off
Andri debian tells me at bootup that devices were not unmounted
Andri properly. I don't use any commands to shutdown debian, I just
Andri use the on/off switch when I'm finished.
Also check that in /etc/rc.d at the appropriate runlevel you have a umount
script (it's the script that will get executed upon the shutdown to umount
all the partitions).
This should already be in place on a Debian system ;)
You never know.
When I upgraded to 2.2.10 from 2.0.36,
On Sun, 18 Jul 1999, Andrei Ivanov wrote:
Also check that in /etc/rc.d at the appropriate runlevel you have a umount
script (it's the script that will get executed upon the shutdown to umount
all the partitions).
This should already be in place on a Debian system ;)
You never
On Sun, 18 Jul 1999, Brian Servis wrote:
The -a option will allow other non-root users to shutdown the machine
with the Ctrl-Alt-Del key press. You will need to create and add the
non-root user names to the /etc/shutdown.allow file, again see the man
page for shutdown.
IIRC, -a in this
ok, if you cant shutdown why do you use linux in the first place?
the command is as root:
shutdown -h now
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
SDF Public Access UNIX System - http://sdf.lonestar.org
On Sun, 18 Jul 1999, [iso-8859-1] Andr? Bell wrote:
Everytime I restart my debian pc after having turned it off
Tyler:
Some of this stuff isn't entirely intuitive to us newbies, you know. Maybe
this should
be placed in the installation documentation, because when you're new to Linux
(or Unix)
it almost seems like powering off is the only thing you can do, unless you have
a
collection of Linux books at
1999 23:24
Subject: Re: Here's an easy question, how shutdown debian?
Tyler:
Some of this stuff isn't entirely intuitive to us newbies, you know.
Maybe this should
be placed in the installation documentation, because when you're new to
Linux (or Unix)
it almost seems like powering off
On 18 Jul, tyler spivey wrote:
| ok, if you cant shutdown why do you use linux in the first place?
| the command is as root:
| shutdown -h now
This is rude and uncalled for. Everybody has to start somewhere.
Comments like the above help no one. Better to let someone else
respond if
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