Le lun. 21 janv. 2019 à 21:38, Nikos Chantziaras <rea...@gmail.com> a écrit :
> On 21/01/2019 20:25, Jacques Montier wrote: > > Le lun. 21 janv. 2019 à 19:04, Nikos Chantziaras <rea...@gmail.com > > <mailto:rea...@gmail.com>> a écrit : > > > > I can't see why "emerge -uv bash" would ever invoke sudo. So I'd say > > that you should first find out what command is being executed with > > sudo. > > To do that, try to emerge bash, and when the sudo prompt pops up, > > switch > > to another terminal window and do: > > > > ps aux | grep sudo > > > > What's the output of that? > > > > ps aux | grep sudo > > 267:root 19845 0.0 0.0 54260 4304 pts/0 S+ 19:23 0:00 > > sudo eix-update > > Well, something is trying to execute a "sudo eix-update". The bash > ebuild certainly doesn't, so you should check your installation for any > weird scripts or aliases you might be using. A grep on /etc for > "eix-update" might also reveal something: > > grep -r eix-update /etc > > And also check your env and aliases: > > which emerge > alias | grep emerge > env | grep eix > > These are general hints on where to look, since I have no clue myself as > to why an "emerge -uv bash" would ever try and execute "sudo > eix-update", so it seems you have digging to do. > > > Hello all, I finally found what was wrong ! To save time, i had written a small bash script to run eix-update, eix-test-obsolete and emerge --depclean. This script was written just for test and was unfortunately called....test. So, when emerging bash, i think the configure phase launched that script.... Well, of course it was my fault. Shame on me ! Sorry for all that noise, but you have been very helpful to me and i thank you very much. Cheers, -- Jacques