Package: bash Version: 3.0-15 Severity: normal Is there a way to turn off bash's reporting of what signals have terminated a program? There is no obvious occurence of the method to shut this off, in the man page.
It is most frustrating to have a script that runs a program where it not unexpected to receive a signal to kill it, and I have to filter out the crap that bash prints out. In a script, it is obvious that this shouldn't even happen -- this behaviour should certainly not be turned on by default: 37400,12> gnuserv.restart /home/tconnors/bin/gnuserv.restart: line 36: 23475 Terminated $GNUSERV 2>/dev/null -- System Information: Debian Release: testing/unstable APT prefers unstable APT policy: (500, 'unstable'), (500, 'testing'), (500, 'stable'), (1, 'experimental') Architecture: i386 (i686) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash Kernel: Linux 2.4.26 Locale: LANG=en_AU, LC_CTYPE=en_AU (charmap=ISO-8859-1) Versions of packages bash depends on: ii base-files 3.1.5 Debian base system miscellaneous f ii libc6 2.3.2.ds1-22 GNU C Library: Shared libraries an ii libncurses5 5.4-8 Shared libraries for terminal hand ii passwd 1:4.0.3-36 change and administer password and bash recommends no packages. -- no debconf information -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]