6b229a1455
closer to doing "the right thing". The structure is now the following: * /etc/rc (from MFS) loads the rest of /etc and /root from /fd and then from floppy (if present), then transfers control to /etc/rc1 * /etc/rc1 loads defaults from /etc/rc.conf.defaults, tries to set the hostname basing on the MAC address of the first ethernet interface, and then sources /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.conf.local for local configurations * The rest of the startup process is then performed (rc.network and so on). Everything except the initial /etc/rc (from MFS) can be overridden with a local version loaded from floppy. But in most cases, you should only need to customize the following files in /etc: rc.conf rc.firewall hosts Previously there were a number of inconsistencies in the calling between files, and also a lot of clutter in rc.conf and rc.firewall. Also, "rc1" was called "rc" and would overwrite the initial /etc/rc from MFS, making it really hard to figure out what was going on in case of bugs.
9 lines
172 B
Plaintext
9 lines
172 B
Plaintext
# Sample rc.conf file for PicoBSD
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# you should mostly set variables here, see rc.conf.defaults.
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case ${hostname} in
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*)
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echo "processing rc.conf for ${hostname}"
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;;
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esac
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