The service command belongs to the procd and does not belong in the
shinit. In the course of the move, the script was also checked with
shellcheck and cleaned up.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
If service() is called w/o parameter then the status display for services
with multiple instances is incorrect. E.g. samba4 or wpad have 2 instances.
root@OpenWrt:~# /etc/init.d/samba4 status
running
root@OpenWrt:~# /etc/init.d/wpad status
running
Before change:
/etc/init.d/samba4 enabled stopped
/etc/init.d/wpad enabled stopped
After change:
/etc/init.d/samba4 enabled running
/etc/init.d/wpad enabled running
Signed-off-by: Alexander Egorenkov <egorenar-dev@posteo.net>
Because /etc/profile (and ~/.profile) are read by login shells only,
aliases and functions defined there are not available to non-login
shells, e.g. when using screen or tmux.
If the ENV environment variable exists (exported by /etc/profile or
~/.profile) and references an existing file, then all interactive shells
(login or non-login) will read that file as well.
This sets the ENV environment variable in /etc/profile, pointing to
/etc/shinit.
This also adds /etc/shinit, which:
* Contains alias and function definitions originally in /etc/profile
* Sources /etc/mkshrc if the user is using mksh (also originally in
/etc/profile), as /etc/mkshrc is meant for all interactive shells
* Sources ~/.mkshrc if the user is using mksh, to compensate for the
fact that mksh will not read ~/.mkshrc if ENV is set
* Sources ~/.shinit if the user is not using mksh
This also removes the shebang from /etc/profile, as the file is sourced,
not executed.
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>