I believe it is the same. the -HUP tells the daemon to re-read it's
config files and start anew.
Bob Crandell said these things on 20001012.1209:
| Does "kill -HUP pid#" equal SIGHUP?
| I just type "inetd" to restart it?
|
| Thanks
|
| [EMAIL PROTECTED] 10/12/2000 11:39:
.
I just type "inetd" to restart it?
Nope, sighup means 'reset yourself, reload, rerun'
you don't need to rerun inetd.
| This line is at the top of /etc/inetd.conf:
| "To re-configure the running INETD process, edit this file,
then
| send the INETD process a SIGHUP signa
I've learned that if I don't move my mouse, I don't have to
reboot as often.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 10/12/2000 2:52:25 PM
Like at the Country Faire...
At 11:28 AM 10/12/00 -0700, Seth Cohn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Nope, sighup means 'reset yourself, reload, rerun'
you don't need to rerun inetd
Bob Crandell wrote:
This line is at the top of /etc/inetd.conf:
"To re-configure the running INETD process, edit this file, then
send the INETD process a SIGHUP signal."
How do you send the inetd process a SIGHUP signal from the
command line? Man inetd doesn't mention it.