GNU/Linux Desktop Survival Guide by Graham Williams |
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In addition to managing the installed packages wajig also allows you to start, stop, reload, and restart services (which are often provided by so called daemons--processes that run on your computer in the background performing various functions on an on-going basis). The commands all follow the same pattern:
$ wajig restart <service name> (/etc/init.d/<service> restart) |
The start and stop commands are obvious. The restart command generally performs a stop followed by a start. The reload command will ask the daemon to reload its configuration files generally without stopping the daemon, if this is possible. The services you can specifiy here depend on what you have installed. Common services include:
apache | Web server |
cron | Regular task scheduler |
exim | Email delivery system |
gdm | The Gnome Windows Display Manager (for logging on) |
ssh | The Secure Shell daemon |
Generally, daemons are started at system boot time automatically.