On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 08:27:45PM -0400, Celejar wrote: > Minor nit: in Debian, '/bin/sh' is a symlink to bash; I don't know what > it is on other systems. So IIUC, when you write '#!/bin/sh', you aren't > really specifying a shell, but are rather saying 'use the standard > shell'.
Which can be different from system to system: ls -l /bin/sh lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 9 2007-03-23 02:30 /bin/sh -> /bin/dash /bin/sh is rather used for POSIX compatibility. Regards, Andrei -- If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough. (Albert Einstein)
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