On Wed, Mar 05, 2003 at 12:36:16PM -0600, Dave Sherohman wrote:Isn't this a good example of why _not_ to have ctrl-alt-del reboot the system?
On Tue, Mar 04, 2003 at 08:37:29PM -0800, Leo Spalteholz wrote:
CTRL+ALT+DEL is more equivalent to "shutdown -r now" than holding the power button..To be precise, under a default debian config, C-A-D is equivalent to
`/sbin/shutdown -t1 -a -r now`, per /etc/inittab.
[ No technical content, just a funny story ]
At a prior job, we had a bunch of servers in a datacenter. Some of the datacenter people liked to play with the keyboard; one of them was convinced that the only server OS in the whole world was Windows NT. He liked to try to log into Windows NT servers (some of the servers that were running NT had easy passwords, I guess).
One day this fellow discovered MY servers. The console screen didn't dissuade him; he just hit ctrl-alt-del to get a "login screen". Sigh. Unscheduled downtime.
Shortly afterward, /etc/inittab had this entry:
ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/bin/echo "Nice try, dumbass"
And yes, the datacenter guy eventually disappeared.
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