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Re: gzip and dpkg problem



On Thu, 6 Jun 1996, Ian Jackson wrote:

> This means that SIGPIPE was set to SIG_IGN when dpkg started.  For
> reasons too complicated to explain here this means that dpkg can't do
> proper error trapping (it always gets an error indication, and can't
> tell whether it's really an error).
> 
> This is a bug in one of:
>   Your inetd, telnetd, rlogind, if you're logging in over the
>     network (some versions of the Debian netbase and/or netstd
>     packages had this problem).

I get that problem when locally su-ing in an xsession

>   Your shell (I know of no shells that cause this problem).
I am using tcsh in my user account but when su and root's shell is bash.

>   The getty you're using.
>     (Some versions of getty_ps are known to have this problem.)

	It's an X session, no getty should be involve

>   The login you're using (I know of no problem here).
>   Any program which started one of the above, or which is in
>     the calling chain for dpkg.
> 


tcsh -> rxvt/xterm -> su -> bash -> dpkg

so I guess it would either be tcsh or rxvt/xterm.

[stuff removed]


> Alexander Goldstein writes ("Re: gzip and dpkg problem"):
> ...
> > I also often have the same problem sometimes (with some packages).  It
> > only happens when su-ing to root.  To bypass it, I just login directly as
> > root on a VC.  I have 1.1 system and it happened with all versions of dpkg
> > including as far way back as .96R6.
> 
> Huh ?  `su' does this ?  I don't believe it ...
> 
> ... no, `su' doesn't.  Perhaps you have `sudo' or something else in
> the calling chain.

no, no sudo, but there is either rxvt or xterm and tcsh

> 
> Please try to identify what it is that's causing the problem, so that
> we can fix it and/or tell others to avoid it :-).
> 
I will try to test it better when I get home.




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