Logoff and Shutdown
If you're ready to cash in your
console and call it a day, use the
logout command. Entering
logout
at the command prompt exits
your current user account and
returns you to the log-in prompt.
(The exit command does the same
thing as logout.) To log out from
multiple consoles, use alt-Fn to
switch between consoles and then
log out from each one. But note
that even if you log out from all
of your active consoles, Linux is
still running.
If you were to power off your
machine at this point, a voice
from your computer would drone,
"You have chosen unwisely!" The
floor would shake, and your PC
would glow white hot while your
hard disk melted into a pool of
molten silicon. Just kidding . . .
sometimes the floor doesn't shake,
but powering off a running Linux
system without using the shutdown
command will most certainly cause
Bad Things to happen to your hard
disk. So if you really want to
exit Linux, be sure that you're
logged in as the root user and
enter the command
shutdown -h now
You'll see some messages
indicating that various subsystems
are being shut down, and then the
computer will be reset. When you
see a message indicating that
shutdown is complete, it's safe to
turn off your PC.
Tip: Pressing ctrl-alt-delete
will also safely shut down your
Red Hat Linux system. Just
remember to power off as soon as
you see your PC's normal bootup
screen. Note that some other Linux
distributions will do a hard reset
(which may cause filesystem
damage) instead of gracefully
shutting down, so don't use
ctrl-alt-delete on non-Red Hat
systems unless you know it's safe.
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