| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586 | <sect2><title>Contents</title><para>The Sysvinit package contains the halt, init, killall5, last, lastb, mesg, pidof, poweroff, reboot, runlevel, shutdown, sulogin,telinit, utmpdump, wall,</para></sect2><sect2><title>Description</title><sect3><title>halt</title><para>Halt notes that the system is being brought down in the file /var/log/wtmp, and then either tells the kernel to halt, reboot or poweroff the system. If halt or reboot is called when the system is not in runlevel 0 or 6, shutdown will be invoked instead (with the flag -h or -r).</para></sect3><sect3><title>init</title><para>Init is the parent of all processes. Its primary role is to create processes from  a  script  stored  in  the  file /etc/inittab. This  file usually has entries which cause init to spawn gettys on each line thatusers can log in. It also controls autonomous processes required by any particular system.</para></sect3><sect3><title>killall5</title><para>killall5 is the SystemV killall command. It sends a signal to all processes except the processes in its own session, so it won't kill the shell that is running the script it was called from.</para></sect3><sect3><title>last</title><para>last searches back through the file /var/log/wtmp (or the file designated by the -f flag) and displays a list of all users logged in (and  out) since that file was created.</para></sect3><sect3><title>lastb</title><para>lastb is the same as last, except that by default it shows a log of the file /var/log/btmp, which contains all the bad login attempts.</para></sect3><sect3><title>mesg</title><para>Mesg controls the access to the users terminal by others. It's typically used to allow or disallow other users to write to his terminal.</para></sect3><sect3><title>pidof</title><para>Pidof finds the process id's (pids) of the named programs and printsthose id's on standard output.</para></sect3><sect3><title>poweroff</title><para>poweroff is equivalent to shutdown -h -p now. It halts the computer andswitches off the computer (when using an APM compliant BIOS and APM is enabled in the kernel).</para></sect3><sect3><title>reboot</title><para>reboot is equivalent to shutdown -r now. It reboots the computer.</para></sect3><sect3><title>runlevel</title><para>Runlevel reads the system utmp file (typically /var/run/utmp) to locate the runlevel record, and then prints the previous and current system runlevel on its standard  output, separated by a single space.</para></sect3><sect3><title>shutdown</title><para>shutdown brings the system down in a secure way. All logged-in users are notified that the system is going down, and login is blocked.</para></sect3><sect3><title>sulogin</title><para>sulogin is invoked by init when the system goes into single user mode (this is done through an entry in /etc/inittab). Init also tries to execute sulogin when it is passed the -b flag from the boot loader (eg, LILO).</para></sect3><sect3><title>telinit</title><para>telinit sends appropriate signals to init, telling it which runlevel tochange to.</para></sect3><sect3><title>utmpdump</title><para>utmpdumps prints the content of a file (usually /var/run/utmp) onstandard output in a user friendly format.</para></sect3><sect3><title>wall</title><para>Wall sends a message to everybody logged in with their mesg permission set to yes.</para></sect3></sect2>
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