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SHUTDOWN(8)		    System Manager's Manual		   SHUTDOWN(8)

NAME
       shutdown, poweroff -- close down	the system at a	given time

SYNOPSIS
       shutdown	  [-]	[-c   |	  -h   |   -p  |  -r  |	 -k]  [-o  [-n]]  time
		[warning-message ...]
       poweroff

DESCRIPTION
       The shutdown utility provides an	automated shutdown procedure  for  su-
       per-users to nicely notify users	when the system	is shutting down, sav-
       ing them	from system administrators, hackers, and gurus,	who would oth-
       erwise  not  bother  with  such niceties.  In order to use the shutdown
       command,	the user must have root	privileges or be a member of the oper-
       ator group.

       The following options are available:

       -c      The system is power cycled (power turned	off and	then back  on)
	       at  the	specified time.	 If the	hardware doesn't support power
	       cycle, the system will be rebooted.  At the present time,  only
	       systems with BMC	supported by the ipmi(4) driver	that implement
	       this  functionality  support this flag.	The amount of time the
	       system is off is	dependent on the device	that  implements  this
	       feature.

       -h      The system is halted at the specified time.

       -p      The system is halted and	the power is turned off	(hardware sup-
	       port required, otherwise	the system is halted) at the specified
	       time.

       -r      The system is rebooted at the specified time.

       -k      Kick  everybody	off.  The -k option does not actually halt the
	       system, but leaves the system multi-user	with  logins  disabled
	       (for all	but super-user).

       -o      If  one of the -c, -h, -p or -r options are specified, shutdown
	       will execute halt(8) or reboot(8) instead of sending  a	signal
	       to init(8).

       -n      If  the	-o  option is specified, prevent the file system cache
	       from being flushed by passing -n	to halt(8) or reboot(8).  This
	       option should probably not be used.

       time    Time is the time	at which shutdown will bring the  system  down
	       and may be the case-insensitive word now	(indicating an immedi-
	       ate  shutdown) or a future time in one of two formats: +number,
	       or yymmddhhmm, where the	year, month, and day may be  defaulted
	       to the current system values.  The first	form brings the	system
	       down  in	 number	 minutes  and  the second at the absolute time
	       specified.  +number may be specified in units other  than  min-
	       utes  by	 appending  the	corresponding suffix: "s", "sec", "m",
	       "min", "h", "hour".

	       If an absolute time is specified, but not a date, and that time
	       today has already passed, shutdown will assume  that  the  same
	       time  tomorrow  was  meant.   (If  a complete date is specified
	       which has already passed, shutdown will print an	error and exit
	       without shutting	the system down.)

       warning-message
	       Any other arguments comprise the	warning	message	that is	broad-
	       cast to users currently logged into the system.

       -       If `-' is supplied as an	option,	the warning  message  is  read
	       from the	standard input.

       At  intervals,  becoming	 more  frequent	 as  apocalypse	approaches and
       starting	at ten hours before shutdown, warning messages	are  displayed
       on the terminals	of all users logged in.	 Five minutes before shutdown,
       or  immediately	if shutdown is in less than 5 minutes, logins are dis-
       abled by	creating /var/run/nologin  and	copying	 the  warning  message
       there.	If  this  file exists when a user attempts to log in, login(1)
       prints its contents  and	 exits.	  The  file  is	 removed  just	before
       shutdown	exits.

       At shutdown time	a message is written to	the system log,	containing the
       time of shutdown, the person who	initiated the shutdown and the reason.
       The  corresponding signal is then sent to init(8) to respectively halt,
       reboot or bring the system down to single-user state (depending on  the
       above  options).	  The time of the shutdown and the warning message are
       placed in /var/run/nologin and should be	used to	inform the users about
       when the	system will be back up and why it is going down	 (or  anything
       else).

       A scheduled shutdown can	be canceled by killing the shutdown process (a
       SIGTERM	should suffice).  The /var/run/nologin file that shutdown cre-
       ated will be removed automatically.

       When run	without	options, the shutdown utility will  place  the	system
       into single user	mode at	the time specified.

       Calling "poweroff" is equivalent	to running:

	     shutdown -p now

FILES
       /var/run/nologin	 tells login(1)	not to let anyone log in

EXAMPLES
       Reboot  the  system  in 30 minutes and display a	warning	message	on the
       terminals of all	users currently	logged in:

	     # shutdown	-r +30 "System will reboot"

COMPATIBILITY
       The hours and minutes in	the second time	format may be separated	 by  a
       colon (``:'') for backward compatibility.

SEE ALSO
       kill(1),	login(1), wall(1), nologin(5), halt(8),	init(8), reboot(8)

HISTORY
       A  shutdown  command was	originally written by Ian Johnstone for	UNSW's
       modified	AT&T UNIX 6th Edn.  It was modified and	then  incorporated  in
       4.1BSD.

FreeBSD	13.2		       November	7, 2022			   SHUTDOWN(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | EXAMPLES | COMPATIBILITY | SEE ALSO | HISTORY

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