Date: Mon, 25 Sep 1995 15:43:15 -0600 From: kelly@fsl.noaa.gov (Sean Kelly) To: gryphon@healer.com, freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, freebsd-ports@freebs.org Subject: Re: ports startup scripts Message-ID: <9509252143.AA11504@emu.fsl.noaa.gov>
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"Coranth" == Coranth Gryphon <gryphon@healer.com> writes: Coranth> But throwing out the entire "rc" script concept, and Coranth> going with (pick an implemention, any mutant Coranth> implementation) SysV-clone I consider bad. Agreed. So what we *really* DON'T need is an all-singing, all-dancing automatic startup/shutdown configuration manager with cycle detection and autoremoval that ports, packages, and anyone else can use, along with a WWW based browser/editor so even someone with less computer experience that one could possibly gain on a Mac can jump right in and with a few drags of the mouse, make one's in.gaflorkd to start up before /usr/libexec/rpc.rfribbitzd. Or, perhaps I should say ... It's NOT THAT HARD to use your own built-in pattern recognition software and hand-configure /etc/rc.local. Often times, the software configuration issue is so complex, what with commercial vendors who won't give you the time of day (much less answer the phone) to poorly assembled freeware, that there's really no better expedient than to read a few convoluted READMEs or what-have-you and fire up (all at the same time now) ``your favorite text editor.'' Remember Jordan's words: we lost the desktop market, and that seems to be the primary target of all this proposed reconfiguration. People using are systems will have enough gray matter to know what to do when they see: % make install Installing fizzlefrazzle-1.2 install -c -o bin -g bin -m 555 fizzd /usr/local/libexec install -c -o bin -g bin -m 555 fizzclean /usr/local/libexec install -c -o bin -g bin -m 555 fizzle /usr/local/bin Installation complete. Now, edit your /etc/rc.local file and add a line to start fizzd. Also, add fizzclean to root's cron, set to run every half hour, more if you think you need it. -- Sean Kelly NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, Boulder Colorado USA A power surge on the Bridge is fails to electrocute the user of a computer panel, due to a highly sophisticated 24th century surge protection feature called a 'fuse'. -- One of 46 things that never happen on Star Trek
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