are right. Anyway I consider it a bit
complex and the fact is that various Debian init scripts return 1 in
the above case.
Thanks for all.
--
Iñaki Baz Castillo
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
n
# 0 if daemon has been stopped
# 1 if daemon was already stopped
# 2 if daemon could not be stopped
2008/7/6, Russ Allbery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> "\"Iñaki" Baz Castillo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Op, sorry, I m
that is already running" but this is the default
behaviour of Debian init scripts (dince --oknodo is optional and of
course not always used).
Thanks for your comments. Best regards.
--
Iñaki Baz Castillo
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ounter
> bad init scripts, please report bugs against the offending packages.
In the above case which is the "bad" init script?:
- lighttpd uses LSB specs.
- apache2 uses Debian specs.
Regards.
--
Iñaki Baz Castillo
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with a subject
people start services manually or they are started when the system swithes
on, so return code is not so important.
But in case of service daemon (as HeartBeat that handles when to start or stop
a service) these return code becomes important and being LSB compliant is,
IMHO, the best way.
J
Andreas and all Debian developers -
This newbie wants to thank you for such a first-class product aka Debian etch. I've been using it now for four months, and over-all, it's been a pleasure.
Sebastian
--
"...heart and soulone will burn."
- Joy Division
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On 12/31/06, Kenward Vaughan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Folks,
You do a wonderful job, keeping the best dist. flowing along and
helping those who need it, on this list. I started with Debian and
can't see myself changing ever. It works too well, even for a bumbling
hobbyist like myself.
Ple
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