On May 4, 2005, at 5:24 PM, Warner Losh wrote: >> Agreed. I consider it a serious misfortune that FreeBSD doesn't use >> /bin/sh as root's shell. On the other hand, it's easy enough to fix, >> so I haven't spent my time complaining about this. :-) > > All BSDs have, since a very long time ago, used /bin/csh as root's > shell. NEXTSTEP never did; and neither does OS X: 9-cube# nidump passwd . | grep root root:********:0:0::0:0:System Administrator:/private/var/root:/bin/sh daemon:*:1:1::0:0:System Services:/var/root:/usr/bin/false 10-cube# uname -a Darwin cube.pkix.net 7.9.0 Darwin Kernel Version 7.9.0: Wed Mar 30 20:11:17 PST 2005; root:xnu/xnu-517.12.7.obj~1/RELEASE_PPC Power Macintosh powerpc Likewise for the majority of UNIX systems I am familiar with (Solaris, Ultrix, HP/UX). In the case of Linux, or a few other systems, they would use a POSIX shell like bash or ksh instead, which are almost entirely backwards-compatible with /bin/sh. -- -ChuckReceived on Wed May 04 2005 - 20:25:41 UTC
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