>The scripts already use stuff like "sed" ([1]) and AFAIK that means they >depend on /usr being mounted.
Then I think it's fine; before in Solaris 9, everything was run with "/sbin/sh", and the actual #! interpreter line was ignored. Casper
>The scripts already use stuff like "sed" ([1]) and AFAIK that means they >depend on /usr being mounted.
Then I think it's fine; before in Solaris 9, everything was run with "/sbin/sh", and the actual #! interpreter line was ignored. Casper