Date: Mon, 21 Apr 2003 09:40:39 -0700 (PDT) From: Doug Barton <DougB@FreeBSD.org> To: "Scot W. Hetzel" <hetzels@westbend.net> Cc: FreeBSD-Current <freebsd-current@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Enhancements to the new rc.d/jail script Message-ID: <20030421093940.L2827@znfgre.tberna.bet> In-Reply-To: <001301c30816$f55e5a50$13fd2fd8@Admin02> References: <200304200055.h3K0tHJB005595@WBIw009.westbend.net> <001301c30816$f55e5a50$13fd2fd8@Admin02>
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On Mon, 21 Apr 2003, Scot W. Hetzel wrote: > From: "Doug Barton" <DougB@freebsd.org> > > On Sat, 19 Apr 2003, Scot W. Hetzel wrote: > > > > > Attached are patches for the new rc.d/jail script. > > > > This looks like good work, thanks! My only question, how will this devfs > > stuff affect a system that isn't running jails? > > > The only affect it would have is having ruleset 10 defined, but not used on > the non-jail system. > > If a sys admin defines ruleset 10 in /etc/rc.devfs, then either the 2 will > be merged or the rc.d/devfs ruleset will be overwritten (if "/sbin/devfs > rule -s 10 delset" is in /etc/rc.devfs). Thanks for the clarification. I think that this has enough foot-shooting potential that it should probably be hidden behind a knob in rc.conf. Doug -- This .signature sanitized for your protection
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