Jason Gunthorpe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I've never had ntpdate ever work while xntpd is running, with the set > options it never actually changes the time, I forget if it's a silent > fail or if it gives some error.
Hmm.. and the system where I was running ntpdate in the background (after I thought I had started xntpd, by the way) doesn't have a running xntpd. I guess it might be appropriate to run a meta-server (which would take down xntpd when receiving an ntpdate request, then restarts xntpd (or restarts it after a short delay if it stopped without authorization)). I'm deferring further discussion of this for a bit, I think I've discovered what I would think of as a bash (and ash, and ksh bug). * * * * * Briefly, this command line: f=/tmp/fifo; rm -f $f; mkfifo $f; ( sleep 100 <$f 0>$f &); sleep 2; echo >$f will kill your interactive shell I'm a bit surprised to find this, um.. undocumented feature in three shells of supposedly different lineage. I should note that it doesn't affect bash (nor other shells) when I tried it under solaris. I guess it might be related to the kernel's handling of sigpipe. Someone want to check to see if it's just me, before I go off and file a whole bunch of bug reports? -- Raul -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]