SYNC(8) | System Manager's Manual | SYNC(8) |
sync
— force
completion of pending disk writes (flush cache)
sync |
The sync
utility can be called to ensure
that all disk writes have been completed before the processor is halted in a
way not suitably done by reboot(8) or
halt(8). Generally, it is preferable to use
reboot(8) or halt(8) to shut down the
system, as they may perform additional actions such as resynchronizing the
hardware clock and flushing internal caches before performing a final
sync
.
The sync
utility utilizes the
sync(2) function call.
A sync
utility appeared in
Version 4 AT&T UNIX.
On systems older than 4.0BSD, commands
like reboot(8) and halt(8) were
unavailable. The shutdown procedure involved running
sync
, waiting for the lights to stop, and turning
off the machine.
Issuing three separate sync
commands (one
line each) was a placebo that would generally suffice in
Version 7 AT&T UNIX machines that were
otherwise quiesced systems. It replaced the one-per-line
sync
as a substitute for waiting.
4.0BSD introduced reboot(2) and sync(2) which rendered this trick obsolete.
April 25, 2024 | macOS 14.4 |