It started over Obamacare.Congress failed to come to an agreement on a budget after Republican lawmakers began pushing to defund Obamacare. Not surprisingly, Senate Democrats and the Obama administration rejected the proposals and the resulting impasse led to the partial shutdown that began in early October 2013.

Nearly 800,000 federal employees were out of work without pay.In addition, more than a million other working employees had their paychecks delayed. On day five of the shutdown, Congress voted to give the furloughed government employees retroactive pay. Meanwhile, some members of Congress kept collecting their paychecks, while others voluntarily gave theirs up.


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V.A. financial benefits were disrupted.Millions of veterans and their families almost did not receive their benefits. The Veterans Affairs secretary at the time, Eric Shinseki, warned that if the shutdown continued through late October, the agency would not be able to send out compensation checks to 5.1 million veterans.

#Shutdownbeards became a thing.With extra time on their hands and no meetings to look presentable for, some furloughed federal staffers tweeted out pictures of their beards, refusing to shave until Congress ended the shutdown.

The shutdown finally came to an end.On Oct. 16, the Senate and House voted to fund the government until Jan. 15 and extend the debt limit. Minor changes were made to Obamacare requiring income verification for those receiving health care. President Obama signed the bill shortly after midnight on Oct. 17, ending the shutdown.

Users must be members of the Administrators group to annotate an unexpected shutdown of a local or remotely administered computer. If the target computer is joined to a domain, members of the Domain Admins group might be able to perform this procedure. For more information, see:

If you want to shut down more than one computer at a time, you can call shutdown for each computer by using a script, or you can use shutdown /i to display the Remote Shutdown box.

As the President has said, the shutdown that occurred last month inflicted completely unnecessary damage on our economy and took a toll on families and businesses across the country. Today, OMB is releasing a report that catalogs the breadth and depth of this damage, and details the various impacts and costs of the October 2013 Federal government shutdown.

The report explains in detail the economic, budgetary, and programmatic costs of the shutdown. These costs include economic disruption, negative impacts on Federal programs and services that support American businesses and individuals, costs to the government, and impacts on the Federal workforce.

First, Federal employees were furloughed for a combined total of 6.6 million days, more than in any previous government shutdown. At its peak, about 850,000 individuals per day were furloughed. That number fell once most Department of Defense civilian employees were able to return to work as the Pentagon implemented the Pay Our Military Act.

Third, the shutdown had significant negative effects on the economy. The Council of Economic Advisers has estimated that the combination of the shutdown and debt limit brinksmanship resulted in 120,000 fewer private sector jobs created during the first two weeks of October. And multiple surveys have shown that consumer and business confidence was badly damaged.

Fifth, the shutdown could have a long-term impact on our ability to attract and retain the skilled and driven workforce that the Federal government needs. The shutdown followed a three-year pay freeze for Federal employees, cuts in training and support, and, for hundreds of thousands of workers, administrative furloughs earlier this year because of sequestration. These cuts will make it harder for the government to attract and retain the talent it needs to provide top level service to the American people.

I bought a NUC5i5RYH and have installed Openelec and Windows 10, which automatically starts within 2 seconds of a shutdown from both Openelec (Kodi) or Windows 10, this is running with Hyper X 8gb DDR3L 1600 SODIMM memory and 320gb 2.5" Toshiba HDD. I have updated the bios to the current 0350 bios from the Intel website and have also switched off WOL or any wake setting in the bios to no avail. I don't see any settings for Deep S4/S5, the settings i have are Wake on LAN from S4/S5, Wake from S5, Wake S3 via CIR, Wake from S4 or S5 via CIR.

Also wanted to know, is it usual for the NUC to power on as soon as you attach the power lead to it, even without touching the power button? as that's what mine does every time, even holding the power button for a 4 second shutdown turns it off and then restarts it within 2 seconds.

Now here is where things started getting muddy. I began to incrementally re-enable starting with port 2, planning on a shutdown test after each increment. There was an unexpected restart after the first shutdown, so I escalated and re-enabled 3 & 4. Ports 5 & 6 remained disabled for a while.

How about shutting the system off? Well, the PXI code can, on exit, reboot itself. Just before that, it could send a TTL signal to the Power Strip that says "Shut off the power in 5 seconds" (or however long it takes to finish the shutdown and restart the boot process).

CBO estimates that the partial shutdown delayed $18 billion in federal spending and suspended some federal services, thus lowering the projected level of real GDP in the first quarter of 2019 by $8 billion (in 2019 dollars), or 0.2 percent.

TLDR, New Job, ~350 windows servers no existing any central management tools. I set up SCCM CB (2111 currently) with a single primary site server (VM) hosting all rolls, and SQL components on a separate VM. Clients installed, returning data as expected. Created PS script using stop-computer -force and shutdown /f to no avail.

When a save point is configured or the SAVE modifier is specified, the shutdown may fail if the RDB file can't be saved.Then, the server continues to run in order to ensure no data loss.This may be bypassed using the FORCE modifier, causing the server to exit anyway.

Since Redis 7.0, the server waits for lagging replicas up to a configurable shutdown-timeout, by default 10 seconds, before shutting down.This provides a best effort minimizing the risk of data loss in a situation where no save points are configured and AOF is disabled.Before version 7.0, shutting down a heavily loaded master node in a diskless setup was more likely to result in data loss.To minimize the risk of data loss in such setups, it's advised to trigger a manual FAILOVER (or CLUSTER FAILOVER) to demote the master to a replica and promote one of the replicas to be the new master, before shutting down a master node.

XJ015 (with SQLCODE 50000) is the expected (successful) SQLSTATE for complete system shutdown. 08006 (with SQLCODE 45000), on the other hand, is the expected SQLSTATE for shutdown of only an individual database.

The URL "jdbc:derby:memory:eh;shutdown=true" results in the expected 08006 error code, but doesn't actually remove the DB from memory. If later on, you try to create a new database with "jdbc:derby:memory:eh;create=true", you'll get an error saying that the database already exists.

EDIT: I went with the first suggestion of "shutdown -h +1 &". Although the result of the command is no longer returned in the Jamf log, this does appear to be working as I'm seeing the machines get successfully updated. Thanks again.

We have a multi-machine highly-available ArcGIS Enterprise deployment, deployed on premises. When our infrastructure team does server patching and needs to restart all of the machines, what is the proper shutdown/restart order to avoid issues?

Preferably, the dependent machines would be shutdown while restarting the file server (or at least the services stopped for those components), then brought back up after the file server becomes available on the network again.

Yes, that order makes perfect sense; in reality steps 1, 2, and 3 in shutdown can be combined as well as 3 and 4 in startup. Otherwise hosted services may take a bit to regain access to the relational data store.

In terms of Portal for ArcGIS, you want to make sure you shutdown the standby to avoid failover (if doing things manually) or stagger the restart times between primary and standby if scheduling automatically. This will keep things from becoming split-brained as the machines start-up; primary will be recorded in the HA configuration file so start-up should be consistent when it comes back online.

But I'm unsure what the whole procedure should be. Do all of the components need to be shutdown, and then only started after the file server has been fully restarted? Or can the components be left running, and then just restarted after the file server is restarted?

I've gotten the one-button safe shutdown working on another of my Pi Zero W units - it's just a one-line addition to a config file, in Raspian anyway ( ) and then a normally-open pushbutton connecting pin 3 with ground (so it shouldn't interfere with the Prusa Einsy pins). e24fc04721

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