This path should not be hard coded in the open call.
Linux prior to 2.4.19 did not have /proc/self/mounts, so for now I'm
making this value /proc/mounts everywhere, but that may change to
/proc/self/mounts on linux; I'm not sure we should care about <2.4.19.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 604646
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=604646
Now that we respect the module blacklists, don't print every module we
try to load, because it might not end up loaded due to the blacklist,
and modprobe doesn't consider that a failure.
Supervisor setups break easily when start/stop/status functions are not
default.
Applications that write multiple PIDs to a pidfile (eg HAProxy as
described in bug 601540), can also benefit from being able to call the
default start/stop/status with modified environment variables.
Expose the default start/stop/status functions as
default_start/stop/status, and use them for the defaults
start/stop/status.
Trivial usage example:
```
stop()
{
t=$(mktemp)
for pid in $(cat $pidfile) ; do
echo $pid >$t
pidfile=$t default_stop
done
rm -f $t
}
```
X-Gentoo-Bug: 601540
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/601540
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
The /etc/init.d/localmount script has a syntax error that causes it to
attempt to mount remote filesystems, causing the boot to fail. The
script appends a "no" to each remote filesystem type, but it should only
be append the "no" to the beginning of the list. This patch fixes
localmount on FreeBSD 12.0. A review of the mount(8) manpage on Ubuntu
12.04 suggests that this patch is correct for Linux, too.
The documentation implied that if you stop a daemon we handle multiple
pids in a pid file. This is not correct. We only handle the first pid.
X-Gentoo-Bug: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=601540
Busybox does not support the 'scope' argument on 'ip address add' or 'ip
route add', this is documented in BUSYBOX.md, but is no longer actually
needed, as the kernel does get it right without manual specification,
and the ifconfig variant already relies on the kernel to get it right.
This is part of #103.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 487208
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=487208
Separate loading the module, if it isn't built in or loaded, from
mounting the file system.
This also makes sure the warning about configuring the module in
/etc/conf.d/modules or building it in is displayed only if it is loaded
successfully.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 595836
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=595836
This allows us to avoid the warnings from bash-4.4 about null bytes in
command substitutions.
If you have separate /usr, are not using an initramfs, and have a file
called /proc/self/environ on your root file system, this will break.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 594534
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=594534