Deutsch   English   Français   Italiano  
<m5aqlaFr19rU4@mid.individual.net>

View for Bookmarking (what is this?)
Look up another Usenet article

Path: ...!news.tomockey.net!news.samoylyk.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail
From: rbowman <bowman@montana.com>
Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: 5 Fun Linux Commands You Should Try At Least Once
Date: 4 Apr 2025 19:36:10 GMT
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <m5aqlaFr19rU4@mid.individual.net>
References: <vshpm2$6sd5$2@dont-email.me> <m53g0mFm5q8U2@mid.individual.net>
	<67ef0717@news.ausics.net> <vsongu$14lpj$1@news1.tnib.de>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Trace: individual.net DIwsW6XFncCNaM63ZxHNTwnh37niSiZcx6ubgp6jFYxxm3IKpG
Cancel-Lock: sha1:tzDRoWnRp4yxNyzRpQ3iEhL4xy8= sha256:WbiJgmmkeOhtJpCIW1SOfkFKLBg+VCKqeDPM2PkQWAg=
User-Agent: Pan/0.160 (Toresk; )
Bytes: 1253

On Fri, 04 Apr 2025 15:40:46 +0200, Marc Haber wrote:

> I am an old fart myself, and I refrain from using killall since it does
> different things on Solaris than on Linux.

My use of killall is very limited. On Ubuntu Brave is a snap and updating 
a running process is beyond snap's capabilities. Brave spawns a lot of 
processes and 'killall brave' gets rid of them with the advantage that it 
will restore your tabs on restart.