I don't know whether this is the right area to put this story, so I'm sorry
if not... Could you then point me to the correct place?
Recently I updated bash to bash-2.0. Since that action (I think), when I
boot the system (SlackWare 2.0.28), I get the following message during boot:
starting daemons: syslogd/etc/rc.d/rc.M: line 29: 38 Interrupt ${NET}/syslogd
This line 29 in rc.M contains the 'fi' statement from
if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.cdrom ]; then
. /etc/rc.d/rc.cdrom
fi <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< this is line 29
Why the space between `.' and `/etc/rc.d/rc.cdrom'?
My cdrom works properly and `top' shows a syslogd...
My `/etc/syslog.conf' is empty, that is, all the lines start with `#'.
`rc.cdrom' does not contain `${NET}', neither does `/etc/rc.d/rc.M'.
Some questions:
- what can be wrong?
- is it unhealthy to my system?
- how to solve it?
Thanks in advance for your attention...
Vriendelijke groeten/Best regards,
Ivo Naninck \|||||/
______________.oOo.__\~ o/__.oOo.__________________________
| V |
| Visit AIRLINE-BBS: +31-(0)76-5300172 |
| (28k8 & ISDN) |
| |
|E-mail: inaninck@koha.nl |
_________________________________Don't let the bits byte!__
/ \
^^^ ^^^