/sbin/reboot
The source code for the Linux kernel is hosted at kernel.org.
No. "Kernel programming" is the writing of code that runs in kernel mode. It is not specific to Linux. "Linux programming" usually refers to any programming done in/for the Linux environment, and is not necessarily specific to the kernel.
Linux is the kernel.
Linux kernel was created in 1991.
The Linux kernel sources can be downloaded from the official Linux Kernel Archives, found at the link below.
No, it is unix-based but Linux is a kernel not an operating system.Ubuntu,Linux Mint,Debian,and puppy Linux,ect. are OS's that use the Linux kernel.
There is no real answer to that, because there is no theLinux operating system. There are several different operating systems that use the Linux kernel but incorporate a variety of different software, each varying in size and code complexity. The Linux kernel includes approximately 13.5 million lines of code, although much of this code will not be used in any given binary kernel image, as it is platform or usage-specific.
$su $reboot or $sudo reboot
Linux is the kernel. As of 8-10-12 the latest stable Linux kernel is 3.5.1.
The 2.4 version of the Linux kernel was released in 2001.
Linux Kernel Developers Summit was created in 2001.
Thousands of people and hundreds of organizations, but the guy in charge is Linus Torvalds.