On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 11:14:51AM +1100, Simon Horman wrote: > The -e argument to echo does not seemed to be supported by dash > and is treated as an literal. > > # bash -c "echo -e fish" > fish > # dash -c "echo -e fish" > -e fish
Ok, pushed: changeset 12549 df7495bf8ed0 > The simple fix seems to be to just remove -e from invocations of echo. > the echo(1) man page documents the -e option as: > > -e enable interpretation of backslash escapes > > But none of the strings printed include such escape sequences. > > This change removes the -e from the output if the init script > on systems where /bin/sh is dash: > > # /etc/init.d/heartbeat start > Starting High-Availability services: mkdir: cannot create directory > `/var/run/heartbeat': File exists That should no longer happen, either, there is test -d $D || mkdir $D. (because -p of mkdir may not be there either) -- : Lars Ellenberg : LINBIT | Your Way to High Availability : DRBD/HA support and consulting http://www.linbit.com DRBD® and LINBIT® are registered trademarks of LINBIT, Austria. _______________________________________________________ Linux-HA-Dev: [email protected] http://lists.linux-ha.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-ha-dev Home Page: http://linux-ha.org/
