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Subject: Re: Another Qmail/OpenBSD Question
From: Camiel Dobbelaar (dobbe
xs4all.nl)Date: Wed Jan 03 2001 - 01:04:09 CST
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All this aside, the ``preferred'' way of starting qmail is to use
daemontools, as outlined in http://Web.InfoAve.Net/~dsill/lwq.html
If people are interested I can post the run files and a utility to create
the proper supervise directory structures.
-- CamOn Wed, 3 Jan 2001, Jim Breton wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 02, 2001 at 09:13:58PM -0500, Kit Halsted wrote: > > If > > > > csh -cf '/var/qmail/rc &' > > > > is valid for rc.local, why does everything else in the file look like > > > > if [ -x /usr/local/sbin/somedaemon ]; then > > echo -n ' somedaemon'; /usr/local/sbin/somedaemon > > fi > > > You can invoke it under any shell you want, really. You don't have to > use csh if you don't want to. I use sh for mine, for instance. > > sh /var/qmail/rc & > or simply > /var/qmail/rc & > > From what I have heard, DJB uses csh in his example because some > implementations of the Bourne shell will cause their children to exit if > they receive a HUP signal... or, something like that. (I could be > completely wrong... it's just something I read on another list.) > > I don't see this as being a problem with our pdksh though. Nor with > bash. > >
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