On Sat, 2018-12-15 at 17:55 +0700, Eugene Grosbein wrote: > 15.12.2018 16:09, Andre Albsmeier wrote: > > > > > On Mon, 10-Dec-2018 at 14:24:42 +0000, Eugene Grosbein wrote: > > > > > > Author: eugen > > > Date: Mon Dec 10 14:24:41 2018 > > > New Revision: 341794 > > > URL: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/341794 > > > > > > Log: > > > MFC r340322-r340324,r340327: periodic/etc/weekly/340.noid > > > > > > Prevent periodic/etc/weekly/340.noid from descending into root > > > directories > > > of jails. Jails have their own user/group databases and this > > > script > > > can produce multiple false warnings, not to mention significant > > > extra > > > load in case of large jailed subtrees. Leave this check for > > > jailed > > > invocations of the same script. > > This gave me: > > > > Check for files with an unknown user or group: > > .: cannot open /usr/share/bsdconfig/common.subr: No such file or > > directory > > > > on systems where bsdconfig is not installed. > This periodic script does not try to access > /usr/share/bsdconfig/common.subr > I think error message comes from another periodic script. > Can you please run it with "sh -x /etc/periodic/weekly/340.noid" to > make sure? > >
It uses sysrc, which sources in /usr/share/bsdconfig/common.subr; this is the first reference to sysrc in any periodic script, so it does establish a new dependency, requiring sysrc to be installed on any system that runs periodic scripts. A safer way to extract the root path of all running jails might be something like: if which -s jls; then allpaths="$(jls -d path)" for onepath in ${allpaths}; do # do whatever with ${onepath} here done fi -- Ian _______________________________________________ svn-src-all@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/svn-src-all To unsubscribe, send any mail to "svn-src-all-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"