I do not know of a need to have the default shell be a build-time
configurable setting. All *nix systems I am aware of have /bin/sh as a
default posix compatible shell.
If some systems running OpenRC do not make that assumption about
/bin/sh, I will consider bringing this back, so feel free to open an
issue.
The read builtin in most shells will interpret backslash characters
as escapes, and they are lost when reading binfmt files line-by-line.
This causes magic strings containing backslashes to be mangled and
become invalid, resulting in erroneous 'invalid entry' messages.
The -r option to read disables special handling of backslashes and
keeps all lines intact.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 575114
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=575114
In the past, OpenRC was a hybrid of a centralized and file-scope
license/copyright structure.
I followed the instructions from the Software Freedom Law Center [1] to
convert to a Centralized structure where possible, for easier future
maintenance.
[1] https://softwarefreedom.org/resources/2012/ManagingCopyrightInformation.html
This makes binfmt processing behave like tmpfiles processing which
follows the same specification as systemd.
This fixes#48.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 545162
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=545162