Date: Fri, 6 Jul 2001 09:26:24 +0300 From: Peter Pentchev <roam@orbitel.bg> To: David O'Brien <obrien@FreeBSD.org> Cc: arch@FreeBSD.org, audit@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: A slight improvement of the rc system Message-ID: <20010706092624.A3782@ringworld.oblivion.bg> In-Reply-To: <20010705174409.A15136@dragon.nuxi.com>; from obrien@FreeBSD.org on Thu, Jul 05, 2001 at 05:44:10PM -0700 References: <20010704124334.F653@ringworld.oblivion.bg> <20010705174409.A15136@dragon.nuxi.com>
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On Thu, Jul 05, 2001 at 05:44:10PM -0700, David O'Brien wrote: > On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 12:43:34PM +0300, Peter Pentchev wrote: > > +script_name_sep=" " # Change if your startup scripts' names contain spaces > > Uh... ever heard of "over engineering"? I think we can assume scripts > don't have spaces in their names. Anyone trying and has the ability to > change this knob knows enought to just not use spaces in a script's name. > This is UNIX. Yep, this is Unix, and Unix has no arbitrary restrictions on filenames. It does not have a 8.3 restriction, or a caps-only restriction; so why should a *part* of the system place a no-spaces restriction on filenames? Just about all the filesystems supported by FreeBSD allow filenames to contain spaces; it's only logical to give the user the ability to use them, if she so desires. It's not overcomplicating the code, either - the IFS shell variable is standardized and used, which means that the shell was written with this in mind; not allowing it is just that - not using the shell's capabilities the way they were meant to be used. G'luck, Peter -- I am jealous of the first word in this sentence. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-audit" in the body of the message
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