For fat and thin ltsp clients I replace the /sbin/poweroff binary with a script that executes the additional commands. Non-ltsp clients do not have issues shutting down.
In my test, I logged in as root from tty1 on my updated ltsp thin client (image rebuilt with the new nbd-disconnect) (ctrl+alt+F1) and executed the original /sbin/shutdown command. I can do further testing, what are the additional commands I need to execute to properly shutdown? On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 1:11 PM, Alkis Georgopoulos <alk...@gmail.com>wrote: > Στις 19/05/2014 10:27 μμ, ο/η Nick Fenger έγραψε: > > >> I only tried the newest version of the nbd-disconnect script on a HP >> Compaq dc7800 and it did not work (shutting down from a root login on >> tty1) while with my additional commands it does shutdown. I had to do >> the alsa --force-unload on all of my Gateway E-Series Pentium 4 clients >> and the newer E-Series dual core ones require the additional commands as >> to my Dell Optiplex 7xx series. >> >> > > Shutting down from root login how? > If you're using `poweroff -fp`, that bypasses the normal shutdown process > (and nbd-disconnect as well). Services wouldn't be stopped, the ssh and nbd > connections wouldn't be closed, NBD swap files on the server wouldn't be > deleted etc. > > If you need `alsa --force-unload` for a client to shut down, > how is that called on non-LTSP clients? > > I.e. if you had a local installation there, the clients wouldn't power off? >
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