<em>ruby</em>, <em>science</em>, <em>shells</em>, <em>sound</em>,
<em>tex</em>, <em>text</em>, <em>utils</em>, <em>vcs</em>,
<em>video</em>, <em>web</em>, <em>x11</em>, <em>xfce</em>,
- <em>zope</em>.
+ <em>zope</em>. The additional section <em>debian-installer</em>
+ contains special packages used by the installer and is not used
+ for normal Debian packages.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ For more information about the sections and their definitions,
+ see the <url id="http://packages.debian.org/unstable/"
+ name="list of sections in unstable">.
</p>
</sect>
<heading>Controlling terminal for maintainer scripts</heading>
<p>
- The maintainer scripts are guaranteed to run with a
- controlling terminal and can interact with the user.
- Because these scripts may be executed with standard output
- redirected into a pipe for logging purposes, Perl scripts
- should set unbuffered output by setting <tt>$|=1</tt> so
- that the output is printed immediately rather than being
- buffered.
+ Maintainer scripts are not guaranteed to run with a controlling
+ terminal and may not be able to interact with the user. They
+ must be able to fall back to noninteractive behavior if no
+ controlling terminal is available. Maintainer scripts that
+ prompt via a program conforming to the Debian Configuration
+ Management Specification (see <ref id="maintscriptprompt">) may
+ assume that program will handle falling back to noninteractive
+ behavior.
</p>
</sect>
+
<sect id="exitstatus">
<heading>Exit status</heading>
</p>
</sect1>
- <sect1>
+ <sect1 id="writing-init">
<heading>Writing the scripts</heading>
<p>
option.
</p>
+ <p>
+ Be careful of using <tt>set -e</tt> in <file>init.d</file>
+ scripts. Writing correct <file>init.d</file> scripts requires
+ accepting various error exit statuses when daemons are already
+ running or already stopped without aborting
+ the <file>init.d</file> script, and common <file>init.d</file>
+ function libraries are not safe to call with <tt>set -e</tt>
+ in effect<footnote>
+ <tt>/lib/lsb/init-functions</tt>, which assists in writing
+ LSB-compliant init scripts, may fail if <tt>set -e</tt> is
+ in effect and echoing status messages to the console fails,
+ for example.
+ </footnote>. For <tt>init.d</tt> scripts, it's often easier
+ to not use <tt>set -e</tt> and instead check the result of
+ each command separately.
+ </p>
+
<p>
If a service reloads its configuration automatically (as
in the case of <prgn>cron</prgn>, for example), the
language currently used to implement it.
</p>
<p>
- Shell scripts (<prgn>sh</prgn> and <prgn>bash</prgn>)
- should almost certainly start with <tt>set -e</tt> so that
- errors are detected. Every script should use
- <tt>set -e</tt> or check the exit status of <em>every</em>
- command.
+ Shell scripts (<prgn>sh</prgn> and <prgn>bash</prgn>) other than
+ <file>init.d</file> scripts should almost certainly start
+ with <tt>set -e</tt> so that errors are detected.
+ <file>init.d</file> scripts are something of a special case, due
+ to how frequently they need to call commands that are allowed to
+ fail, and it may instead be easier to check the exit status of
+ commands directly. See <ref id="writing-init"> for more
+ information about writing <file>init.d</file> scripts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every script should use <tt>set -e</tt> or check the exit status
+ of <em>every</em> command.
</p>
-
<p>
Scripts may assume that <file>/bin/sh</file> implements the
SUSv3 Shell Command Language<footnote>
</p>
<p>
- The maintainer scripts are guaranteed to run with a
- controlling terminal and can interact with the user.
- See <ref id="controllingterminal">.
+ The maintainer scripts are not guaranteed to run with a
+ controlling terminal and may not be able to interact with
+ the user. See <ref id="controllingterminal">.
</p>
</item>