Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2005 13:57:58 -0500 From: Michael Beattie <mtbeedee@gmail.com> To: "Michael P. Soulier" <msoulier@digitaltorque.ca> Cc: Gerry Freymann <lists@interpool.ca>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: starting services? Message-ID: <d4b4435a0511211057k1cf20b45l46d6bf32007086c2@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <fb6605670511211019ka5a7fd6y41686aa275accce5@mail.gmail.com> References: <000001c5eb7d$240a47a0$d1c88a45@picklepie> <20051117091909.00812699.lists@interpool.ca> <fb6605670511210832r1cfb2dadpadb647fb99c39370@mail.gmail.com> <20051121130819.0be55b9a.lists@interpool.ca> <fb6605670511211019ka5a7fd6y41686aa275accce5@mail.gmail.com>
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On 11/21/05, Michael P. Soulier <msoulier@digitaltorque.ca> wrote: > On 11/21/05, Gerry Freymann <lists@interpool.ca> wrote: > > but if you did: > > > > /usr/local/etc/rc.d/apache.sh start > > > > things should go as planned. > > That's odd. Why's that? Why should the script care? > > Mike It uses part of the command line to determine where it's run form.=20 That way it knows to look at like /etc or /usr/local/etc for configuration as well as other things.
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