benang@cs.its.ac.id wrote:
Okay, I've used the "init 0" for shutting down for a week now. Well, it can always shut my machine down. But some of the time, the hard drive apparently wasn't unmounted because occasionally when I turn on the machine, it always replayed transactions. There's about 200 transaction replayed when this happens. So, I am worried that eventually it will corrupt my Linux. Is there any other way to solve this problem?
Thanks.
Hans defaber said:
benang@cs.its.ac.id wrote:
Hi, I've installed a new SuSE 10.1 with some additional packages that I've downloaded from the net. Now I can't shut down. I think it was all because I installed fuse 2.6.5 and ntfs-3g 1.516. Even in startup the kernel is marked tainted because of the fuse package. How can I fix this?
Thanks in advance.
Fare thee well, Bawenang R. P. P.
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Try to open a terminal window. login as root (su , password) Then type init 0
Does that work ?
Succes, Hans
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The shutdown procedure is not much more than a'n init 0 , the init program is the workhorse of the startup and shutdown. If you look at the shutdown messages on your screen, you should see at the end the unmount messages of all disks. I think your real problem is a program that should be shut down first before the systemshutdown. Mostly database applications have a separate shutdown. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org