07-20-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rogerben
Pls can you explain ur point more clearly..
What it means is that, if you give shutdown command in a solaris shell, then anyone connected to system shell will see a message on their screen that system is going down in 1 minute...then again after 30 seconds...
You can ssh to your test system and watch the screen. At the same time give shutdown command at console. See it yourself.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hi,
I want to know the difference between halt and shutdown commands and which is better to use?
Regards,
visu (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: visu_ak
2 Replies
2. AIX
Hi,
What is the difference between those two ?
thanks
Vilius (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vilius
1 Replies
3. Linux
Dear all,
I typed in init 1 on my redhat box as root and according to wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runlevel):
1 Single-User Mode Does not configure network interfaces, start daemons, or allow non-root logins
So now I can't connect back to it. How do I change the init back to 3?... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: z1dane
8 Replies
4. Red Hat
What is the difference between 'init s' and 'init 1'.
I know that both will work to change the current run level to single user mode.
Is there any difference in those two commands? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: praveen_b744
5 Replies
5. Solaris
what are the major Difference Between run level & init level (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajaramrnb
2 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have Oracle 9i R2 on AIX 5.2. My Database is running in shared server mode (MTS).
Sometimes when I shutdown the database it shutsdown cleanly in 4-5 mints and sometimes it takes good 15-20 minutes and then I get some ora-600 errors and only way to shutdown is by opening another session and... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixhp
7 Replies
7. Red Hat
What's the difference between the two. I've seen xinit.d directory not always but on some systems. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Praveen_218
1 Replies
8. Red Hat
I encountered a problem on one of our database servers.
OS: CentOS 5.5 final
Kernel: 2.6.18-238.5.1.el5.028stab085.2 (OpenVZ kernel)
We wrote some DB-Start/Stop-scripts ("/db2/admin/scripts_dba/start_services.ksh" and ".../stop_services.ksh") to start the database instances. (Database... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bakunin
1 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi,
Guys can any one explain me the difference between init s and init 1 in linux?
this would be very useful....
thanx in advance..
regards
Amandeep (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aman.singh2886
3 Replies
10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
This question is more in the line of how init messages get sent to a console during startup/shutdown. My problem has to do with exporting a VM from AWS to KVM (and a retry on virtual box). I am looking for a understanding on how init messages are sent to a device and what controls them My two... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jtkells
0 Replies
time(1) General Commands Manual time(1)
Name
time - time a command
Syntax
time command
/bin/time command
Description
The command lets the specified command execute and then outputs the amount of elapsed real time, the time spent in the operating system,
and the time spent in execution of the command. Times are reported in seconds and are written to standard error.
If you are using any shell except the C shell, you can give the command as shown on the first line of the Syntax section. If you are using
the C shell, you must use the command's full pathname as shown on the second line of the Syntax section. If you do not use the full path-
name, will execute its own built-in command that supplies additional information and uses a different output format.
The command can be used to cause a command to be timed no matter how much CPU time it takes. For example:
% /bin/time cp /etc/rc /usr/bill/rc
0.1 real 0.0 user 0.0 sys
% /bin/time nroff sample1 > sample1.nroff
3.6 real 2.4 user 1.2 sys
This example indicates that the command used negligible amounts of user and system time and had an elapsed time of 1/10 second (0.1). The
command used 2.4 seconds of user time and 1.2 seconds of system time, and required 3.6 seconds of elapsed time.
Restrictions
Times are measured to an accuracy of 1/10 second. Thus, the sum of the user and system times can be larger than the elapsed time.
See Also
csh(1)
time(1)