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- Everybody uses Arch btw, can't quit Vim, <loves/tolerates/hates> systemd, and wants to interject for a moment. You can stop now.
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Important: never execute code or follow advice that you don't understand or can't verify, especially here. The word of the day is credibility. This is a meme community -- even the most helpful comments might just be shitposts that can damage your system. Be aware, be smart, don't fork-bomb your computer.
A stop job is running for ... (45min / no limit)
Alt-SysReq-B
Sudo shutdown now -r
Sudo reboot now
will shutdown now
'shut down' is two words, here.
the meme spells it like the command shutdown
;-)
I've repurposed a broken T2 macbook with Ubuntu Server, but any time I issue a reboot command, it just shuts down, and I need to manually walk to my garage and boot it back up.
Does anyone know why I'm so stoopid?
I was having issues with my pc hanging on reboot, so i changed the bios to auto boot when power is applied, and use a smart switch to manually power cycle when it hangs.
Not sure if the mac bios supports that, but its worth a look
run0 reboot
I will always use the GUI for this when given the option. Change my mind (you can't).
I often remote into my machine, so it's a lot easier to type the command.
I won't try but I'll always use the command line.
It's faster for me! Ctrl+alt+T brings up terminal, sudo reboot. Enter.
sudo reboot -h now
sudo ps -ef | awk '{print $2}' | xargs -r kill -9
Alt+SysRq-O
# init 6
You, like me, must be old.
I also frequently pass -l
to the ssh
command.
I'm not old, I just like how short the command is
Fair enough, I can respect that.
I didn't get that.
Checked the man
and it's not deprecated. So what does it have to do with "old"?
Nowadays most Linux users seem to use ssh user@host
. When I was getting started, that didn't exist (or at least I was unaware of it) so I still frequently use the -l
flag instead.
Nothing wrong with it, just that at least I mostly encounter its use by experienced users.
OIC. Good to know in case I ever have to work on some old CentOS 5 box lying around ever again.
It also looks kinda proper, using that instead of the @
, so when making shell scripts, I might want to prefer this.
I just flick the switch on the surge protector.
Let's get completely unnecessary:
# systemctl isolate runlevel6.target
sudo reboot 0
...is my go-to.
reboot -f
Because real men login as root and don't care about such silly things like an init system or file system syncing!
To quote the man page:
-f Does not invoke shutdown(8) and instead performs the actual action you would expect from the name.
sudo shutdown -r now
sudo
Live Mas as the root account
What is the difference between that and simply reboot
? Does systemctl reboot
have any benefits?
reboot
is linked (aliased) to your init program. In the case you are using systemd then it's equivalent to systemctl reboot
.
reboot
is generic and calls whatever init program you use.
There are more than one init. Like for example GNU Shepherd.
runit
SysV, Upstart
Gentoo uses OpenRC
Wondering the same
Edit: after a quick google session it seems like usually the reboot
command is linked to systemctl
so it should be pretty much the same thing as far as I understand.
Dummy me I type "systemctl restart" instead 🤦♂️
Can you give Linus a Raiden hat?
PuTTY: "unexpectedly" disconnected.