Translations by Alex Smith

Alex Smith has submitted the following strings to this translation. Contributions are visually coded: currently used translations, unreviewed suggestions, rejected suggestions.

117 of 17 results
81.
Process management daemon.
2006-11-02
Process management daemon
82.
This daemon is normally executed by the kernel and given process id 1 to denote its special status. When executed by a user process, it will actually run /sbin/telinit.
2006-11-02
This daemon is normally executed by the kernel and given process id 1 to denote its special status. When executed by a user process, it will actually run /sbin/telinit
98.
%s: missing job name
2006-11-02
%s: missing job name
100.
%s: missing event name
2006-11-02
%s: missing event name
114.
Job
2006-11-02
Job
115.
Event
2006-11-02
Event
127.
List known jobs.
2006-11-02
List known jobs.
130.
Emit an event.
2006-11-02
Emit an event.
146.
Halt the system.
2006-11-02
Halt the system.
147.
Power off the system.
2006-11-02
Power off the system.
148.
Reboot the system.
2006-11-02
Reboot the system.
155.
[UTMP]
2006-11-02
[UTMP]
156.
Output previous and current runlevel.
2006-11-02
Output previous and current runlevel.
164.
TIME [MESSAGE]
2006-11-02
TIME [MESSAGE]
165.
Bring the system down.
2006-11-02
Bring the system down.
166.
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. Logged in users are warned by a message sent to their terminal, you may include an optional MESSAGE included with this. Messages can be sent without actually bringing the system down by using the -k option. If TIME is given, the command will remain in the foreground until the shutdown occurs. It can be cancelled by Control-C, or by another user using the -c option. The system is brought down into maintenance (single-user) mode by default, you can change this with either the -r or -h option which specify a reboot or system halt respectively. The -h option can be further modified with -H or -P to specify whether to halt the system, or to power it off afterwards. The default is left up to the shutdown scripts.
2006-11-02
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. Logged in users are warned by a message sent to their terminal, you may include an optional MESSAGE included with this. Messages can be sent without actually bringing the system down by using the -k option. If TIME is given, the command will remain in the foreground until the shutdown occurs. It can be cancelled by Control-C, or by another user using the -c option. The system is brought down into maintenance (single-user) mode by default, you can change this with either the -r or -h option which specify a reboot or system halt respectively. The -h option can be further modified with -H or -P to specify whether to halt the system, or to power it off afterwards. The default is left up to the shutdown scripts.
185.
Change runlevel.
2006-11-02
Change runlevel.