Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

truspi(1) [osx man page]

truspi(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 truspi(1)

NAME
truspi, Other_name_for_same_program(), Yet another name for the same program. -- This line parsed for whatis database. SYNOPSIS
truspi, [-abcd] [-a path] [file] [file ...] arg0 arg2 ... DESCRIPTION
Use the .Nm macro to refer to your program throughout the man page like such: truspi, Underlining is accomplished with the .Ar macro like this: underlined text. A list of items with descriptions: item a Description of item a item b Description of item b A list of flags and their descriptions: -a Description of -a flag -b Description of -b flag FILES
/usr/share/file_name FILE_1 description /Users/joeuser/Library/really_long_file_name FILE_2 description SEE ALSO
a(1), b(1), c(1), a(2), b(2), a(3), b(3) Darwin June 2, 2019 Darwin

Check Out this Related Man Page

SystemStarter(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 					  SystemStarter(8)

NAME
SystemStarter -- Start, stop, and restart system services SYNOPSIS
SystemStarter [-gvxdDqn] [action [service]] DESCRIPTION
The SystemStarter utility is deprecated. System services should instead be described by a launchd.plist(5). See launchd(8) for more details. The launchd utility is available on Mac OS X 10.4 and later. In earlier versions of Mac OS X, the SystemStarter utility is used to start, stop, and restart the system services which are described in the /Library/StartupItems/ and /System/Library/StartupItems/ paths. The optional action argument specifies which action SystemStarter performs on the startup items. The optional service argument specifies which startup items to perform the action on. If no service is specified, all startup items will be acted on; otherwise, only the item pro- viding the service, any items it requires, or any items that depend on it will be acted on. During boot SystemStarter is invoked by launchd(8) and is responsible for starting all startup items in an order that satisfies each item's requirements. ACTIONS
start start all items, or start the item that provides the specified service and all items providing services it requires. stop stop all items, or stop the item that provides the specified service and all items that depend on it. restart restart all items, or restart the item providing the specified service. OPTIONS
-g (ignored) -v verbose (text mode) startup -x (ignored) -r (ignored) -d print debugging output -D print debugging output and dependencies -q be quiet (disable debugging output) -n don't actually perform action on items (no-run mode) NOTES
Unless an explicit call to ConsoleMessage is made, SystemStarter examines the exit status of the startup item scripts to determine the suc- cess or failure of the services provided by that script. FILES
/Library/StartupItems/ User-installed startup items. /System/Library/StartupItems/ System-provided startup items. SEE ALSO
ConsoleMessage(8), launchd(8), launchd.plist(5), rc(8) HISTORY
The SystemStarter utility appeared in Darwin 1.0 and was extended in Darwin 6.0 to support partial startup and interprocess communication. SystemStarter was deprecated by launchd(8) in Darwin 8.0. Darwin April 12, 2002 Darwin
Man Page