| REBOOT(8) | System Manager's Manual | REBOOT(8) | 
halt, reboot
    — stopping and restarting the system
| halt | [ -lNnq] | 
| reboot | [ -lNnq] | 
The halt and
    reboot utilities flush the file system cache to
    disk, send all running processes a SIGTERM (and
    subsequently a SIGKILL) and, respectively, halt or
    restart the system. The action is logged, including entering a shutdown
    record into the user accounting database.
When the system is halted with the halt command, the system is powered off.
The options are as follows:
-lhalt or
      reboot and log this themselves.-N-n-q-n option is not specified). This option should
      probably not be used.Normally, the shutdown(8) utility is used when the system needs to be halted or restarted, giving users advance warning of their impending doom and cleanly terminating specific programs.
The SIGKILL will follow the
    SIGTERM by an intentionally indeterminate period of
    time. Programs are expected to take only enough time to flush all dirty data
    and exit. Developers are encouraged to file a bug with the OS vendor, should
    they encounter an issue with this functionality.
A reboot utility appeared in
    4.0BSD.
| December 20, 2017 | Mac OS X 12 |