now I'm confused - I thought it should b a noGo to use /bin/bash within maintainer scripts - but it seems to apply more to init scripts rather then additional scripts. can anybody enlighten me?
2015-02-18 13:18 GMT+01:00 Norvald H. Ryeng <norvald.ry...@oracle.com>: > On Wed, 18 Feb 2015 12:29:21 +0100, Bjoern Boschman <bjo...@boschman.de> > wrote: > >> Package: mysql-server >> Version: 5.5.42-1 >> Severity: important >> >> Hi guys, >> >> unfortunatelly i found some bashism still used. >> >> additions/echo_stderr:#!/bin/bash >> additions/mysql-systemd-start:#!/bin/bash >> additions/debian-start:#!/bin/bash >> additions/debian-start.inc.sh:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-common.postrm:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-server-5.6.config:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-server-5.6.mysql.init:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-server-5.6.postinst:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-server-5.6.postrm:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-server-5.6.preinst:#!/bin/bash >> mysql-server-5.6.prerm:#!/bin/bash >> >> this also applies to mysql-5.5 and mariadb-10 > > > That shouldn't be a problem as long as they use /bin/bash. But I won't mind > if you get rid of the bashisms and convert them to /bin/sh. > > Regards, > > Norvald H. Ryeng -- Mit freundlich Grüßen / Kind regards Björn Boschman -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org