SHUTDOWN

NAME

shutdown - close down the system

SYNOPSIS

shutdown [ -h | -r ] [ -fqs ] [ now | hh:ss | +mins ] [ message ]
reboot [ -h | -r ] [ -fqs ] [ now | hh:ss | +mins ] [ message ]
fastboot [ -h | -r ] [ -fqs ] [ now | hh:ss | +mins ] [ message ]
halt [ -h | -r ] [ -fqs ] [ now | hh:ss | +mins ] [ message ]
fasthalt [ -h | -r ] [ -fqs ] [ now | hh:ss | +mins ] [ message ]

The current cLIeNUX command itself says....

$Usage:   shutdown [-krhfnc] [-t secs] time [warning message]
                  -k:      don't really shutdown, only warn.
                  -r:      reboot after shutdown.
                  -h:      halt after shutdown.
                  -f:      do a 'fast' reboot (skip fsck).
                  -F:      Force fsck on reboot.
                  -n:      do not go through "init" but go down real fast.
                  -c:      cancel a running shutdown.
                  -t secs: delay between warning and kill signal.
                  ** the "time" argument is mandatory! (try "now") **

HHmmm. No -q.
 

DESCRIPTION

In general, shutdown prepares the system for a power down or reboot. A absolute or delta time can be given, and periodic messages will be sent to all users warning of the shutdown. If no message is specified on the command line, shutdown will ask for a message to be sent, unless the -q option is set.

halt is the same as shutdown -h -q now

fasthalt is the same as shutdown -h -q -f now

reboot is the same as shutdown -r -q now

fastboot is the same as shutdown -r -q -f now

The default delta time, if none is specified, is 2 minutes.

Five minutes before shutdown (or immediately, if shutdown is less than five minutes away), the /etc/nologin file is created with a message stating that the system is going down and that logins are no longer permitted. The login (1) program will not allow non-superusers to login during this period. A message will be sent to all users at this time.

When the shutdown time arrives, shutdown notifies all users, tells init(8) not to spawn more getty(8)'s, writes the shutdown time into the /var/log/wtmp file, kills all other processes on the system, sync(2)'s, unmounts all the disks, sync(2)'s again, waits for a second, and then either terminates or reboots the system.  

OPTIONS

-h
Halt the system. Do not reboot. This option is used when powering down the system.
-r
Reboot the system.
-f
Fast. When the system is rebooted, the file systems will not be checked. This is arranged by creating /fastboot, which /etc/rc must detect (and delete).
-q
Quiet. This uses a default broadcast message, and does not prompt the user for one.
-s
Reboot in single user mode. This is arranged by creating /etc/singleboot, which simpleinit(8) detects (and deletes).
 

FILES

/etc/rc
/fastboot
/etc/singleboot
/etc/nologin
/var/log/wtmp
 

SEE ALSO

umount(8), login(1), reboot(2), simpleinit(8), init(8)  

BUGS

Unlike the BSD shutdown, users are notified of shutdown only once or twice, instead of many times, and at shorter and shorter intervals as "apocalypse approaches." Some would construe this as a feature.  

AUTHOR

Peter Orbaek (poe@daimi.aau.dk)
Modified by jrs@world.std.com