On Thursday 15 July 2004 15.15, Martin Dickopp wrote: > Sebastian Henschel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: [/etc/default] > See Policy 9.3.2. (Disclaimer: IANADD.)
Which does only say: | To ensure that vital configurable values are always available, the | init.d script should set default values for each of the shell | variables it uses, either before sourcing the /etc/default/ file or | afterwards using something like the : ${VAR:=default} syntax. which isn't much. IMHO, /etc/default files are an ugly kludge for when a daemon to be started form /etc/init.d scripts needs its configuration value to be given from environment variables or commandline parameters. If your application has a proper configuration file, by all means use that and not /etc/default. As for the name: IIRC (big If) RedHat introduced that directory, so you'd have to ask them. cheers -- vbi -- OpenPGP encrypted mail welcome - my key: http://fortytwo.ch/gpg/92082481
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