:> :> What do you think ? Or what are your experiences ? : :I hate it unreservedly. If we need a source of seeded default values, :we should have rc.conf.default, uncommented, read-only. rc.conf is :where people expect to make their changes, and it is immensely bogus to :have sysinstall creating rc.conf.site which is quietly included *after* :everything in rc.conf (so that when someone changes rc.conf, the change :is overridden). : :--
My opinion is that since we have /etc/rc and /etc/rc.local, we might as well use /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.conf.local the same way -- that is, just as /etc/rc should not be touched by anyone, neither should /etc/rc.conf be touched by anyone. sysinstall ( and any other GUI configurator ) should mess with /etc/rc.conf.site The user messes with /etc/rc.conf.local Perhaps the problem is that we are simply naming these things badly. Frankly, I would rather get rid of rc.conf.site entirely and just leave rc.conf and rc.conf.local -- and have sysinstall mess with rc.conf.local. -Matt Matthew Dillon <dil...@backplane.com> To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message