This puts single quotes around everything and uses eval on the
command-lines that actually start ctdbd. The eval causes the single
quotes to be interpreted.
The "redhat" init style no longer uses the Red Hat daemon function.
It loses the quoting and re-splits on spaces. Instead we add an extra
line that uses the success/failure functions to keep things pretty.
Note that this means that we don't respect daemon's
$DAEMON_COREFILE_LIMIT variable but we do our own core file handling
with $CTDB_SUPPRESS_COREFILE anyway. daemon's core file handling was
probably overriding what we were doing anyway, so this can be regarded
as a bug fix.
Signed-off-by: Martin Schwenke <martin@meltin.net>
# then return
[ -z "$2" -o \( -n "$3" -a "$3" != "$2" \) ] && return
# then return
[ -z "$2" -o \( -n "$3" -a "$3" != "$2" \) ] && return
case "$1" in
--*) sep="=" ;;
-*) sep=" " ;;
case "$1" in
--*) sep="=" ;;
-*) sep=" " ;;
case $init_style in
valgrind)
case $init_style in
valgrind)
- valgrind -q --log-file=/var/log/ctdb_valgrind \
- $ctdbd --valgrinding $CTDB_OPTIONS
+ eval valgrind -q --log-file=/var/log/ctdb_valgrind \
+ $ctdbd --valgrinding "$CTDB_OPTIONS"
- startproc $ctdbd $CTDB_OPTIONS
+ eval startproc $ctdbd "$CTDB_OPTIONS"
rc_status -v
RETVAL=$?
;;
redhat)
rc_status -v
RETVAL=$?
;;
redhat)
- daemon $ctdbd $CTDB_OPTIONS
+ eval $ctdbd "$CTDB_OPTIONS"
+ [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && success || failure
echo
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/ctdb || RETVAL=1
;;
debian)
echo
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/ctdb || RETVAL=1
;;
debian)
- start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --background \
- --exec $ctdbd -- $CTDB_OPTIONS
+ eval start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --background \
+ --exec $ctdbd -- "$CTDB_OPTIONS"