This is the mail archive of the
cygwin@cygwin.com
mailing list for the Cygwin project.
Re: Beginnings of a patch: /etc/hosts
- From: Igor Pechtchanski <pechtcha at cs dot nyu dot edu>
- To: Robert Collins <rbcollins at cygwin dot com>
- Cc: cygwin at cygwin dot com
- Date: Wed, 11 Sep 2002 20:10:53 -0400 (EDT)
- Subject: Re: Beginnings of a patch: /etc/hosts
- Reply-to: cygwin at cygwin dot com
On 12 Sep 2002, Robert Collins wrote:
> On Thu, 2002-09-12 at 08:57, Igor Pechtchanski wrote:
> > On Wed, 11 Sep 2002, Paul Johnston wrote:
> >
> > > > No, I'm not. I'm incorporating Warren Young's suggestion.
> > > > Unless someone with ME can confirm that 'uname -s' returns
> > > > CYGWIN_9*? Nicholas?
> > >
> > > To me that's a step backwards - uname -s or $OS are the correct ways
> > > to detect the operating system. Warren's approach would be fooled if
> > > a user defined $SYSTEMROOT on Win 9x.
> >
> > Win 9x does not set $OS... At least my Win 98 machine at home doesn't.
> > Besides, the user can always set $OS to fool the script,
>
> Rule #1: The user knows better than the tool. If the user wants to fool
> the script, they can, even with uname. If a user is doing that, assume
> they have a reason and let them do it with grace.
>
> Rob
True. Hey, I'm a control freak myself... I was not speaking against
"fooling the script", I was just making an observation. However, the
issue here is not the intentional "fooling" that you describe, but
unintentional. It's much harder to do that with 'uname -s' than with an
environment variable.
Besides, why would anyone want to fool a post-install script?
Mmm, I guess I could think of a few reasons, but then shouldn't all
post-install scripts be susceptible to fooling in the same way, i.e.,
"with grace"? Should this be documented somewhere?
Igor
--
http://cs.nyu.edu/~pechtcha/
|\ _,,,---,,_ pechtcha@cs.nyu.edu
ZZZzz /,`.-'`' -. ;-;;,_ igor@watson.ibm.com
|,4- ) )-,_. ,\ ( `'-' Igor Pechtchanski
'---''(_/--' `-'\_) fL a.k.a JaguaR-R-R-r-r-r-.-.-. Meow!
It took the computational power of three Commodore 64s to fly to the moon.
It takes a 486 to run Windows 95. Something is wrong here. -- SC sig file
--
Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
Bug reporting: http://cygwin.com/bugs.html
Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/