Date: Sun, 5 Jun 2016 09:36:26 -0700 From: David Christensen <dpchrist@holgerdanske.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: sh[it] and What am I missing here? Message-ID: <5754550A.6020500@holgerdanske.com> In-Reply-To: <6f157455-0bda-ef46-82dc-e97fb0c4a08b@columbus.rr.com> References: <57544c10.90e58c0a.cacbc.62fd@mx.google.com> <cdf04501-79ef-9dbb-14f0-ed10a6d7241e@columbus.rr.com> <57545029.5060805@gmail.com> <6f157455-0bda-ef46-82dc-e97fb0c4a08b@columbus.rr.com>
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On 06/05/2016 09:30 AM, Baho Utot wrote: > No I don't want to have sh as my shell or change the default shell. > I am just writing a script to build packages from ports on a new install. > As bash is not available but sh was I'll use that to script into. > > Now when I was writing the script syntax that should have been a Ok in > sh it was/is failing. > After some head scratching I found that maybe I wasn't really using or > in a bourne shell ie /bin/sh. > That made me think that even though I have #!/bin/sh at the top of the > script some how I wasn't really getting sh but csh. > > So here is what I tried. > Power on console ( boot computer ) > Login in as root > /bin/sh > > set # to show environment etc > WTF SHELL says I am in csh???? > > It should say SHELL=/bin/sh > > Hence my question here as to what is going on. Is your script executable? # chmod +x scriptname Does it have a shebang line? #!/bin/sh Does it make use of the SHELL variable? David
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