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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting ls Post 50749 by google on Friday 30th of April 2004 03:59:37 PM
Old 04-30-2004
Yeah, understood the 1. Its the \ls -1l that I was questioning.
 
TELINIT(8)							      telinit								TELINIT(8)

NAME
telinit - Change SysV runlevel SYNOPSIS
telinit [OPTIONS...] {COMMAND} DESCRIPTION
telinit may be used to change the SysV system runlevel. Since the concept of SysV runlevels is obsolete the runlevel requests will be transparently translated into systemd unit activation requests. OPTIONS
The following options are understood: --help Prints a short help text and exits. --no-wall Do not send wall message before reboot/halt/power-off. The following commands are understood: 0 Power-off the machine. This is translated into an activation request for poweroff.target and is equivalent to systemctl poweroff. 6 Reboot the machine. This is translated into an activation request for reboot.target and is equivalent to systemctl reboot. 2, 3, 4, 5 Change the SysV runlevel. This is translated into an activation request for runlevel2.target, runlevel3.target, ... and is equivalent to systemctl isolate runlevel2.target, systemctl isolate runlevel3.target, ... 1, s, S Change into system rescue mode. This is translated into an activation request for rescue.target and is equivalent to systemctl rescue. q, Q Reload daemon configuration. This is equivalent to systemctl daemon-reload. u, U Serialize state, reexecute daemon and deserialize state again. This is equivalent to systemctl daemon-reexec. EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. NOTES
This is a legacy command available for compatibility only. It should not be used anymore, as the concept of runlevels is obsolete. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemctl(1), wall(1) systemd 208 TELINIT(8)
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