shutdown(8)

NAME

shutdown - bring the system down

SYNOPSIS

shutdown [OPTION]...  TIME [MESSAGE]

DESCRIPTION

shutdown arranges for the system to be brought down in a safe way. All logged-in users are notified that the system is going down and, within the last five minutes of TIME, new logins are prevented.

TIME may have different formats, the most common is simply the word 'now' which will bring the system down immediately. Other valid formats are +m, where m is the number of minutes to wait until shutting down and hh:mm which specifies the time on the 24hr clock.

Once TIME has elapsed, shutdown sends a request to the init(8) daemon to bring the system down into the appropriate runlevel.

This is performed by emitting the runlevel(7) event, which includes the new runlevel in the RUNLEVEL environment variable as well as the previous runlevel (obtained from the environment or from /var/run/utmp) in the PREVLEVEL variable. An additional INIT_HALT variable may be set, this will contain the value HALT when bringing the system down for halt and POWEROFF when bringing the system down for power off.

OPTIONS

-r Requests that the system be rebooted after it has been brought
down.
-h Requests that the system be either halted or powered off after
it has been brought down, with the choice as to which left up to the system.
-H Requests that the system be halted after it has been brought
down.
-P Requests that the system be powered off after it has been
brought down.
-c Cancels a running shutdown. TIME is not specified with this
option, the first argument is MESSAGE.
-k Only send out the warning messages and disable logins, do not
actually bring the system down.

ENVIRONMENT

RUNLEVEL
shutdown will read the current runlevel from this environment variable if set in preference to reading from /var/run/utmp

FILES

/var/run/utmp
Where the current runlevel will be read from; this file will also be updated with the new runlevel.
/var/log/wtmp
A new runlevel record will be appended to this file for the new runlevel.

NOTES

The Upstart init(8) daemon does not keep track of runlevels itself, instead they are implemented entirely by its userspace tools.

See runlevel(7) for more details.

AUTHOR

Written by Scott James Remnant <scott@netsplit.com>

REPORTING BUGS

Report bugs at <https://launchpad.net/upstart/+bugs>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2009 Canonical Ltd.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

SEE ALSO

runlevel(7) init(8) telinit(8) reboot(8)
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