Nowadays most Linux users seem to use ssh user@host. When I was getting started, that didn’t exist (or at least I was unaware of it) so I still frequently use the -l flag instead.
Nothing wrong with it, just that at least I mostly encounter its use by experienced users.
OIC. Good to know in case I ever have to work on some old CentOS 5 box lying around ever again.
It also looks kinda proper, using that instead of the @, so when making shell scripts, I might want to prefer this.
sudo reboot -h now
You, like me, must be old.
I also frequently pass
-l
to thessh
command.I’m not old, I just like how short the command is
Fair enough, I can respect that.
I didn’t get that.
Checked the
man
and it’s not deprecated. So what does it have to do with “old”?Nowadays most Linux users seem to use
ssh user@host
. When I was getting started, that didn’t exist (or at least I was unaware of it) so I still frequently use the-l
flag instead.Nothing wrong with it, just that at least I mostly encounter its use by experienced users.
OIC. Good to know in case I ever have to work on some old CentOS 5 box lying around ever again.
It also looks kinda proper, using that instead of the
@
, so when making shell scripts, I might want to prefer this.https://youtu.be/PeWMwrdFBw0?t=144
Let’s get completely unnecessary:
# systemctl isolate runlevel6.target
sudo shutdown -r now
Alt+SysRq-O
sudo ps -ef | awk '{print $2}' | xargs -r kill -9
sudo reboot 0
…is my go-to.
reboot -f
Because real men login as root and don’t care about such silly things like an init system or file system syncing!
To quote the man page: