On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 06:19:44PM -0500, Mackenzie Morgan wrote: > On Tuesday 17 November 2009 5:02:22 pm Steve Beattie wrote: > > In 9.10, Network Manager has been converted to upstart, so the > > recommended way to stop it in that release and going forward is: > > > > sudo stop network-manager > > Upstart has new ways to do things? Is this on the wiki or something?
Hrm, I can't find anything on wiki.ubuntu.com; http://upstart.ubuntu.com/getting-started.html documents it in the Job Control section. The other way it's documented is that, at least in karmic, sysv-style initscripts that have been converted to upstart get backwards compatible symlink to an upstart utility that warns you that it's been deprecated like so: $ sudo /etc/init.d/network-manager stop Rather than invoking init scripts through /etc/init.d, use the service(8) utility, e.g. service network-manager stop Since the script you are attempting to invoke has been converted to an Upstart job, you may also use the stop(8) utility, e.g. stop network-manager -- Steve Beattie <[email protected]> http://NxNW.org/~steve/
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