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This is a ****really**** newbie question, but it's driving me nuts and I can't find it anywhere on the internet. What does the "ctl" in everything stand for? (E.g., "journalctl", "systemctl", ...). I am assuming it is "control"?
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does it really matter that much
NAME
systemctl - Control the systemd system and service manager
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I think you're right, it is 'control': http://www.freedesktop.org/software/sys … emctl.html
systemctl — Control the systemd system and service manager
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I always thought it was "cuttlefish"...
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Lennart Poettering is a big fan of the band Hole, so he postfixed all the tool names with Courtney Love's initials hoping one day she'd shack up with him. But he got her middle name wrong, so she turned him down. Otherwise it would have totally worked.
EDIT: and aren't you glad he got it wrong? Who'd want to use journalcml and systemcml. Camels?
*thinks to self: my next project might be called camelctl ... now I just need to figure out what it will do*
"UNIX is simple and coherent" - Dennis Ritchie; "GNU's Not Unix" - Richard Stallman
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EDIT: and aren't you glad he got it wrong? Who'd want to use journalcml and systemcml. Camels?
*thinks to self: my next project might be called camelctl ... now I just need to figure out what it will do*
Parse scripts into Perl, obviously.
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Please remember to write a cool book about it.
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*thinks to self: my next project might be called camelctl ... now I just need to figure out what it will do*
Or camelcml
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Linux user #545703
/ is the root of all problems.
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