On Thu, 10 Jul 2008 09:23:10 -0700, Dan Thurman wrote: > Michael Schwendt wrote: > > > > On Thu, 10 Jul 2008 08:16:28 -0700, Dan Thurman wrote: > > > > > Whoa! > > > > > > There is a clue: open("/usr/lib/alliance/lib/tls/i686/sse2/libc.so.6", > > > O_RDONLY) = -1 > > > > > > > > > What this means is that package Alliance is somehow screwing things > > up! > > > > Not exactly, but look at the "alliance-libs" package, which is the > > culprit. It installs /etc/profile.d/alc_env.sh which plays with > > $MANPATH for example. Re-review needed it seems. > > > > > Hmm... I think someone needs to ensure that the Alliance package needs > > > to be > > > re-examined as far as ensuring other programs do not break? > > > > http://bugzilla.redhat.com > > > I found out with testing, that csh works fine, but shell does not. The > shell environment variables are not being setup/passed properly before > the profile.d files are being run. I find that nearly all of the tests > using > -z flag are showing that environment variables prior to executing > the profile.d files are empty, so hard-wired environment variables are > being declared. It does not appear to be a problem with Alliance's > scripts, rather it is something else "higher up", or so it seems. The problem *is* with the Alliance profile.d script. Fedora uses a default MANPATH as defined in /etc/man.config, and the $MANPATH env var is undefined. Therefore the -z check in Alliance's sh script is inappropriate, as it causes the script to set $MANPATH to point to Alliance's manuals and override /etc/man.config. Instead, the alliance pkg could append a MANPATH definition to /etc/man.config and remove it again upon pkg removal. "man man" explains how "man" searches for manuals. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list