vBulletin Search Engine Optimization
| |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| ||||
| On 23 Feb 2008, at 6:09 AM, Unix Fan wrote: > Heinrich Rebehn wrote: >> You are certainly right. But my point was, that in one case (rm) it >> is >> appropriate for the system to output an error message, if it cannot >> perform an action that the user requested, and in the other case >> (pkill) >> it's not. >> >> -Heinrich > > pkill(1) and pgrep(1) were imported almost 9 releases ago... based > on commands defined by another operating system. > > Why should the behaviour be changed now? > > It could break countless numbers of scripts.. > > > > -Nix Fan. > > OpenBSD was imported over 12 years ago from a tree based upon another operating system, whose tree was imported years earlier based upon another operating system. With your argument, why bother to fix / change anything from the original OS release OpenBSD is based upon. "It could break countless number of scripts.." I find it interesting that *BSD (not just OpenBSD) let the GNU crowd dictate the future of how U*ix like operating system should behave. Ian McWilliam |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|