On Wed, Mar 15, 2006 at 05:25:41PM +0100, Petr Salinger wrote: > --- osdef.h.in~ 2006-03-15 16:53:47.000000000 +0100 > +++ osdef.h.in 2006-03-15 16:53:47.000000000 +0100 > @@ -107,6 +107,7 @@ > extern char *tgoto __P((char *, int, int)); > > #ifdef POSIX > +#include <string.h> > extern int setsid __P((void)); > extern int setpgid __P((int, int)); > extern int tcsetpgrp __P((int, int)); > > Can you please test it more ?
Ok I'm on it. > > Ah, that EBADF is the same error we see during startup (on i386 too): > > > > /lib/init/mount-functions.sh: line 108: 0: Bad file descriptor > > /etc/rcS.d/S10checkroot.sh: line 41: 0: Bad file descriptor > > Yes, and it is very strange - descriptor 0 is stdin. > It looks like it have been closed or even > not passed open by kernel to /sbin/init ... Unlike Linux, kFreeBSD doesn't open /dev/console or initialise any variable when running init (or at least this used to be the behaviour in 5.x), but our sysvinit is compatible with that. Have you looked at the script though? This is a really weird hack: exec 9<&0 </etc/fstab 9 isn't referenced anywhere else... it's not surprising that if you redirect a non-existant descriptor to 0, your fd 0 will be messed up. I wonder how this can possibly work on gnu/linux. -- Robert Millan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]