diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'beagle/debian-rfs/usr/share/debconf/confmodule.sh')
| -rw-r--r-- | beagle/debian-rfs/usr/share/debconf/confmodule.sh | 100 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 100 deletions
diff --git a/beagle/debian-rfs/usr/share/debconf/confmodule.sh b/beagle/debian-rfs/usr/share/debconf/confmodule.sh deleted file mode 100644 index 415b361..0000000 --- a/beagle/debian-rfs/usr/share/debconf/confmodule.sh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,100 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/sh -# This is a shell library to interface to the Debian configration management -# system. -# -# This library is obsolete. Do not use. - -############################################################################### -# Initialization. - -# Check to see if a FrontEnd is running. -if [ ! "$DEBIAN_HAS_FRONTEND" ]; then - PERL_DL_NONLAZY=1 - export PERL_DL_NONLAZY - # Ok, this is pretty crazy. Since there is no FrontEnd, this - # program execs a FrontEnd. It will then run a new copy of $0 that - # can talk to it. - exec /usr/share/debconf/frontend $0 $* -fi - -# Only do this once. -if [ -z "$DEBCONF_REDIR" ]; then - # Redirect standard output to standard error. This prevents common - # mistakes by making all the output of the postinst or whatever - # script is using this library not be parsed as confmodule commands. - # - # To actually send something to standard output, send it to fd 3. - exec 3>&1 1>&2 - DEBCONF_REDIR=1 - export DEBCONF_REDIR -fi - -# For internal use, send text to the frontend. -_command () { - echo $* >&3 -} - -echo "WARNING: Using deprecated debconf compatibility library." - -############################################################################### -# Commands. - -# Generate subroutines for all commands that don't have special handlers. -# Each command must be listed twice, once in lower case, once in upper. -# Doing that saves us a lot of calls to tr at load time. I just wish shell had -# an upper-case function. -old_opts="$@" -for i in "capb CAPB" "set SET" "reset RESET" "title TITLE" \ - "input INPUT" "beginblock BEGINBLOCK" "endblock ENDBLOCK" "go GO" \ - "get GET" "register REGISTER" "unregister UNREGISTER" "subst SUBST" \ - "fset FSET" "fget FGET" "visible VISIBLE" "purge PURGE" \ - "metaget METAGET" "exist EXIST" \ - "x_loadtemplatefile X_LOADTEMPLATEFILE"; do - # Break string up into words. - set -- $i - eval "db_$1 () { - _command \"$2 \$@\" - read _RET - old_opts="\$@" - set -- \$_RET - shift - RET="\$*" - set -- \$old_opts - unset old_opts - }" -done -# $@ was clobbered above, unclobber. -set -- $old_opts -unset old_opts - -# By default, 1.0 protocol version is sent to the frontend. You can -# pass in a different version to override this. -db_version () { - if [ "$1" ]; then - _command "VERSION $1" - else - _command "VERSION 1.0" - fi - # Not quite correct, but not worth fixing in obsolete code. - read -r RET -} - -# Here for backwards compatibility. -db_go () { - _command "GO" - read -r RET - if [ "$RET" = 30 ]; then - RET='back' - fi -} - -# Just an alias for input. It tends to make more sense to use this to display -# text, since displaying text isn't really asking for input. -db_text () { - db_input $@ -} - -# Cannot read a return code, since there is none and we would block. -db_stop () { - echo STOP >&3 -} |
