11-19-2003
Cheers jsilva.
Its a 233mhz G3 (bondi coloured RevB imac) with fairly little ram, so i kinda doubt osx will run properly. I even heard that apple were giving refunds for people who bought osx to run on a G3.
I checked out NetBSD ppc, and that says it does support bondi iMacs, so i may well go for that. I have been checking out the unix/bsd bit of osx on my powerbook, but i get the impression that installing a distro is an education in itself, so i wanted to try it. I aim to set up a small network with my pb, an old G4 400 (for big downloads via broadband) and the imac running unix.
Thanks for the advice
ora
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LEARN ABOUT LINUX
ctrlaltdel
CTRLALTDEL(8) Linux Programmer's Manual CTRLALTDEL(8)
NAME
ctrlaltdel - set the function of the Ctrl-Alt-Del combination
SYNOPSIS
ctrlaltdel hard|soft
DESCRIPTION
Based on examination of the linux/kernel/sys.c code, it is clear that there are two supported functions that the Ctrl-Alt-Del sequence can
perform: a hard reset, which immediately reboots the computer without calling sync(2) and without any other preparation; and a soft reset,
which sends the SIGINT (interrupt) signal to the init process (this is always the process with PID 1). If this option is used, the init(8)
program must support this feature. Since there are now several init(8) programs in the Linux community, please consult the documentation
for the version that you are currently using.
ctrlaltdel is usually used in the /etc/rc.local file.
FILES
/etc/rc.local
SEE ALSO
simpleinit(8), init(8)
AUTHOR
Peter Orbaek (poe@daimi.aau.dk)
AVAILABILITY
The ctrlaltdel command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
Linux 1.2 25 October 1993 CTRLALTDEL(8)