also sprach Petter Reinholdtsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007.12.26.1724 +0100]:
> Can you test this patch to see if it solve your problem?
I am having a hard time reproducing this; the only machine where
I still see the behaviour is the gateway in my parent's place, and
I can't work on that remotely.
I tested a bit, to see if there is a way to detect the runlevel when
the scripts in /etc/rcS.d/ is being executed, and the closest thing I
could find is the init argument as reported by ps.
It is 'init boot' while /etc/rcS.d/ is executed, and 'init [2]' etc
when a real runlevel is entered. The b
[Martin F Krafft]
> I can't help but think that a simple hack like
[...]
> would solve the problem.
It would solve this problem, and might create a new one. With such
change, invoke-rc.d would no longer complain when invoked during the
shutdown sequence. I'm not sure about the impact of this ch
also sprach Petter Reinholdtsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.11.26.1755 +]:
> It fetches the info from utmp. Perhaps that file have incorrect
> information in it? I suspect runlevel 'S' isn't treated by init
> as a real runlevel, and this make who and runlevel believe the
> current runlevel is t
[Martin F Krafft]
> first off, I have no idea why you're escaping the space,
Me neither. Probably historical reasons. :)
> and second, unfortunately, the result is not always correct; as a
> consequence, invoke-rc.d complains about being invoked during
> shutdown during system startup, because
Package: sysv-rc
Version: 2.86.ds1-33
Severity: normal
File: /usr/sbin/invoke-rc.d
invoke-rc.d determines the runlevel when invoked, using
/sbin/runlevel | sed 's/.*\ //'
first off, I have no idea why you're escaping the space, and second,
unfortunately, the result is not always correct; as a
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