What is the difference between “when the operating system shuts down” and “when the kernel shuts...











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1
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Reading one of Stephen's excellent replies, I was wondering what differences are between




When the operating system shuts down. ...




and




When the kernel shuts down, ... (... I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel)




?



Is "the variant which uses an external command to shut down" "when the OS shuts down" or "when the kernel shuts down"?



What does "I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel" mean in other words?



Does system call reboot() reboot the OS or kernel?



Does command reboot reboot the OS but not the kernel?



Thanks.










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  • Deleting the reference and link to the reboot() documentation, the most fundamental part of the sentence, from the last quote is utterly inexplicable to me.
    – Michael Homer
    2 hours ago










  • That's because I don't quite understant what the original means. If you do, thank you in advance to tell me what that means.
    – Tim
    2 hours ago












  • I think you should just quote accurately.
    – Michael Homer
    1 hour ago















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












Reading one of Stephen's excellent replies, I was wondering what differences are between




When the operating system shuts down. ...




and




When the kernel shuts down, ... (... I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel)




?



Is "the variant which uses an external command to shut down" "when the OS shuts down" or "when the kernel shuts down"?



What does "I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel" mean in other words?



Does system call reboot() reboot the OS or kernel?



Does command reboot reboot the OS but not the kernel?



Thanks.










share|improve this question
























  • Deleting the reference and link to the reboot() documentation, the most fundamental part of the sentence, from the last quote is utterly inexplicable to me.
    – Michael Homer
    2 hours ago










  • That's because I don't quite understant what the original means. If you do, thank you in advance to tell me what that means.
    – Tim
    2 hours ago












  • I think you should just quote accurately.
    – Michael Homer
    1 hour ago













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











Reading one of Stephen's excellent replies, I was wondering what differences are between




When the operating system shuts down. ...




and




When the kernel shuts down, ... (... I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel)




?



Is "the variant which uses an external command to shut down" "when the OS shuts down" or "when the kernel shuts down"?



What does "I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel" mean in other words?



Does system call reboot() reboot the OS or kernel?



Does command reboot reboot the OS but not the kernel?



Thanks.










share|improve this question















Reading one of Stephen's excellent replies, I was wondering what differences are between




When the operating system shuts down. ...




and




When the kernel shuts down, ... (... I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel)




?



Is "the variant which uses an external command to shut down" "when the OS shuts down" or "when the kernel shuts down"?



What does "I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel" mean in other words?



Does system call reboot() reboot the OS or kernel?



Does command reboot reboot the OS but not the kernel?



Thanks.







linux kernel shutdown






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago

























asked 2 hours ago









Tim

25.5k74244448




25.5k74244448












  • Deleting the reference and link to the reboot() documentation, the most fundamental part of the sentence, from the last quote is utterly inexplicable to me.
    – Michael Homer
    2 hours ago










  • That's because I don't quite understant what the original means. If you do, thank you in advance to tell me what that means.
    – Tim
    2 hours ago












  • I think you should just quote accurately.
    – Michael Homer
    1 hour ago


















  • Deleting the reference and link to the reboot() documentation, the most fundamental part of the sentence, from the last quote is utterly inexplicable to me.
    – Michael Homer
    2 hours ago










  • That's because I don't quite understant what the original means. If you do, thank you in advance to tell me what that means.
    – Tim
    2 hours ago












  • I think you should just quote accurately.
    – Michael Homer
    1 hour ago
















Deleting the reference and link to the reboot() documentation, the most fundamental part of the sentence, from the last quote is utterly inexplicable to me.
– Michael Homer
2 hours ago




Deleting the reference and link to the reboot() documentation, the most fundamental part of the sentence, from the last quote is utterly inexplicable to me.
– Michael Homer
2 hours ago












That's because I don't quite understant what the original means. If you do, thank you in advance to tell me what that means.
– Tim
2 hours ago






That's because I don't quite understant what the original means. If you do, thank you in advance to tell me what that means.
– Tim
2 hours ago














I think you should just quote accurately.
– Michael Homer
1 hour ago




I think you should just quote accurately.
– Michael Homer
1 hour ago










1 Answer
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4
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The post you have quoted from actually says this:




When the kernel shuts down, or reboots, it doesn’t care about processes and doesn’t kill them (see reboot() for details; I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel).




Your selective editing has spliced together unrelated sentences to create a false impression.



The part you have kept (from after the semicolon) relates to the part immediately before the semicolon (which you have deleted). That is, the variant of reboot() which uses an external command to shut down (LINUX_REBOOT_CMD_RESTART2, in the documentation, which was linked) is being excluded from consideration for Stephen's purposes.



The first quote is not relevant.






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






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    up vote
    4
    down vote













    The post you have quoted from actually says this:




    When the kernel shuts down, or reboots, it doesn’t care about processes and doesn’t kill them (see reboot() for details; I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel).




    Your selective editing has spliced together unrelated sentences to create a false impression.



    The part you have kept (from after the semicolon) relates to the part immediately before the semicolon (which you have deleted). That is, the variant of reboot() which uses an external command to shut down (LINUX_REBOOT_CMD_RESTART2, in the documentation, which was linked) is being excluded from consideration for Stephen's purposes.



    The first quote is not relevant.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      The post you have quoted from actually says this:




      When the kernel shuts down, or reboots, it doesn’t care about processes and doesn’t kill them (see reboot() for details; I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel).




      Your selective editing has spliced together unrelated sentences to create a false impression.



      The part you have kept (from after the semicolon) relates to the part immediately before the semicolon (which you have deleted). That is, the variant of reboot() which uses an external command to shut down (LINUX_REBOOT_CMD_RESTART2, in the documentation, which was linked) is being excluded from consideration for Stephen's purposes.



      The first quote is not relevant.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        The post you have quoted from actually says this:




        When the kernel shuts down, or reboots, it doesn’t care about processes and doesn’t kill them (see reboot() for details; I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel).




        Your selective editing has spliced together unrelated sentences to create a false impression.



        The part you have kept (from after the semicolon) relates to the part immediately before the semicolon (which you have deleted). That is, the variant of reboot() which uses an external command to shut down (LINUX_REBOOT_CMD_RESTART2, in the documentation, which was linked) is being excluded from consideration for Stephen's purposes.



        The first quote is not relevant.






        share|improve this answer












        The post you have quoted from actually says this:




        When the kernel shuts down, or reboots, it doesn’t care about processes and doesn’t kill them (see reboot() for details; I’m considering that the variant which uses an external command to shut down isn’t the kernel).




        Your selective editing has spliced together unrelated sentences to create a false impression.



        The part you have kept (from after the semicolon) relates to the part immediately before the semicolon (which you have deleted). That is, the variant of reboot() which uses an external command to shut down (LINUX_REBOOT_CMD_RESTART2, in the documentation, which was linked) is being excluded from consideration for Stephen's purposes.



        The first quote is not relevant.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 1 hour ago









        Michael Homer

        45.1k7119159




        45.1k7119159






























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