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Re: Cygwin64 ignoring /etc/passwd shell field?
- From: Jim Burwell <jimb at jsbc dot cc>
- To: cygwin at cygwin dot com
- Date: Wed, 26 Feb 2014 16:03:51 -0800
- Subject: Re: Cygwin64 ignoring /etc/passwd shell field?
- Authentication-results: sourceware.org; auth=none
- References: <6f9492621546f3eeca905b6281314451 at mykolab dot ch> <530CAA5C dot 8060505 at cygwin dot com> <530D10B2 dot 7050506 at jsbc dot cc> <20140225215511 dot GB6065 at calimero dot vinschen dot de> <530D261C dot 5000403 at jsbc dot cc> <530D2932 dot 5010906 at cygwin dot com> <20140226100712 dot GS2246 at calimero dot vinschen dot de> <530E7E8A dot 1070303 at jsbc dot cc>
On 2/26/2014 15:53, Jim Burwell wrote:
> On 2/26/2014 02:07, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
>> On Feb 25 18:37, Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
>>> On 2/25/2014 6:24 PM, Jim Burwell wrote:
>>>> On 2/25/2014 13:55, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
>>>>> On Feb 25 13:52, Jim Burwell wrote:
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I've noticed after installing an update the Cygwin64 appears to ignore
>>>>>> the contents of the shell field in /etc/passwd. I normally run
>>>>>> /bin/tcsh as my shell, and changing this field used to result in any new
>>>>>> login shells running tcsh. Now it just runs bash regardless.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Has something changed?
>>>>> No. Works for me. Do you start `mintty -'?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Corinna
>>>>>
>>>> Interestingly, it works as expected with mintty, but not with xterm,
>>>> uxterm, uterm.
>>>>
>>>> Was going to try rxvt, but noticed it's not in Cygwin64.
>>>>
>>>> It also works when I ssh into my cygwin.
>>>>
>>>> So appears to be a problem with xterm and related?
>>> Yes, and it's a conscious change. See
>>> <https://sourceware.org/ml/cygwin-xfree/2014-02/msg00005.html>.
>> Weird, I was pretty sure we already have an /etc/shells file installed
>> by default. Apparently not. So, shan't we add one?
>>
>> /bin/sh
>> /bin/bash
>> /bin/dash
>> /bin/mksh
>> /bin/zsh
>> /usr/bin/sh
>> /usr/bin/bash
>> /usr/bin/dash
>> /usr/bin/mksh
>> /usr/bin/zsh
>>
>> The base-files package would be a good place to be. David?
>>
> Well, at least it wasn't a subconscious decision. :-)
>
> Thanks for the pointer!
>
> I agree. Every distro should have a default /etc/shells with the
> typical shells in it.
>
>
>
> - Jim
>
>
Or on second thought, the shells themselves should run a post install
which add themselves to /etc/shells.
- Jim
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