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Operating Systems HP-UX The life cycle of System logfiles Post 302785325 by vbe on Monday 25th of March 2013 10:54:59 AM
Old 03-25-2013
The current will become OLD* and you will have a new one created...
So you always have current and a previous...
I can gues what you mean because I had to modify/create an alternative for an old 10.20 server in the countryside... when the security people once a month but randomly decided to test the electricity genertor, they would switch off the mains... and after 10 minutes once happy cut the generator and put the mains back on...
For months I was struggling to understand what was happening because in OLD I would have a reboot after crash that when just strting oracle ends...

So I you have more than ONE reboot then yes your OLD would not be very usefull...
 

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reboot(3C)																reboot(3C)

NAME
reboot - reboot system or halt processor SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/reboot.h> int reboot(int howto, char *bootargs); The reboot() function reboots the system. The howto argument specifies the behavior of the system while rebooting and is a mask con- structed by a bitwise-inclusive-OR of flags from the following list: RB_AUTOBOOT The machine is rebooted from the root filesystem on the default boot device. This is the default behavior. See boot(1M) and kernel(1M). RB_HALT The processor is simply halted; no reboot takes place. This option should be used with caution. RB_ASKNAME Interpreted by the bootstrap program and kernel, causing the user to be asked for pathnames during the bootstrap. RB_DUMP The system is forced to panic immediately without any further processing and a crash dump is written to the dump device (see dumpadm(1M)) before rebooting. Any other howto argument causes the kernel file to boot. The interpretation of the bootargs argument is platform-dependent. Upon successful completion, reboot() never returns. Otherwise, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error. The reboot() function will fail if: EPERM The {PRIV_SYS_CONFIG} privilege is not asserted in the effective set of the calling process. intro(1M), boot(1M), dumpadm(1M), halt(1M), init(1M), kernel(1M), reboot(1M), uadmin(2) 22 Mar 2004 reboot(3C)
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