Turns out that revision 1.52 was a bad idea. It broke the long

standing ability to list a non-existant device in /etc/ttys to keep it
from dying.  This is a documented feature of init(8):
     The init utility can also be used to keep arbitrary daemons running,
     automatically restarting them if they die.  In this case, the first field
     in the ttys(5) file must not reference the path to a configured device
     node and will be passed to the daemon as the final argument on its com-
     mand line.  This is similar to the facility offered in the AT&T System V
     UNIX /etc/inittab.

So rather than fix the man page to 'break' this feature, back out the change.

At the time this change was made, people felt that the spamage from
getty was annoying on headless consoles.  Andrew Gallatin noted:
> Most of my machines are headless without video cards and use a serial
> console.  With devfs this means that /dev/ttyv[1-N] do not exist and
> getty bitches like this:
>
> Sep 26 11:00:11 monet getty[543]: open /dev/ttyv1: No such file or directory

and we went off and applied this hack rather than fixing getty to
sleep forever when it gets an unknown device, as was Andrew's other
suggestion.  Since it breaks things, I'm off to do that instead.
This commit is contained in:
Warner Losh 2004-09-28 04:22:55 +00:00
parent c6eadeaa66
commit 89e3b380f9

View File

@ -935,7 +935,7 @@ new_session(session_t *sprev, int session_index, struct ttyent *typ)
* then don't add the device to the session list.
*/
if ((fd = open(sp->se_device, O_RDONLY | O_NONBLOCK, 0)) < 0) {
if (errno == ENXIO || errno == ENOENT) {
if (errno == ENXIO) {
free_session(sp);
return (0);
}