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Re: [nas] 2 possible patches for the 1.9.1 version



Jon Trulson schrieb:
>> Patch:
>> diff -Naur nas-1.9.org/lib/audio/Aproto.h nas-1.9/lib/audio/Aproto.h
>> --- nas-1.9.org/lib/audio/Aproto.h      2006-08-13 20:33:08.000000000
>> +0200
>> +++ nas-1.9/lib/audio/Aproto.h  2007-08-11 17:58:47.000000000 +0200
>> @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@
>>
>> #define AU_DEFAULT_TCP_PORT            8000
>> #define AU_DEFAULT_DECNET_TASK         "AUDIO$"
>> -#define AU_DEFAULT_UNIX_PATH           "/tmp/.sockets/audio"
>> +#define AU_DEFAULT_UNIX_PATH           "/var/run/nasd/audio"
>>
>> #define auFalse                                0
>> #define auTrue                         1
>> diff -Naur nas-1.9.org/server/os/connection.c
>> nas-1.9/server/os/connection.c
>> --- nas-1.9.org/server/os/connection.c  2007-03-18 07:55:09.000000000
>> +0100
>> +++ nas-1.9/server/os/connection.c      2007-08-11 19:05:02.000000000
>> +0200
>> @@ -203,10 +203,10 @@
>> #ifdef hpux
>> #define X_UNIX_DIR      "/usr/spool/sockets/audio"
>> #define X_UNIX_PATH     "/usr/spool/sockets/audio/"
>> -#define OLD_UNIX_DIR    "/tmp/.sockets"
>> +#define OLD_UNIX_DIR    "/var/run/nasd"
>> #else
>> -#define X_UNIX_DIR      "/tmp/.sockets"
>> -#define X_UNIX_PATH     "/tmp/.sockets/audio"
>> +#define X_UNIX_DIR      "/var/run/nasd"
>> +#define X_UNIX_PATH     "/var/run/nasd/audio"
>> #endif
>> #endif
> 
>   This one I am not sure about either... It does sound like a good
>   idea, but:
> 
>   - Is this the generally accepted practice for linux now?  Should we
>     '#if defined(linux)' it?
> 
>   - looking briefly, it looks like at least Solaris 10 also does the
>     /var/run thing... Are there any Solaris people that think this
>     should be done on that platform by default too?
> 
>   - *BSD's?  What are they doing these days?
> 
>   I don't want to add this particular patch as-is (at least for 1.9.1)
>   since it will affect all OS's.  I think it would be ok with an 'if
>   defined(linux)' though.

Yes, it shut be an solution for all OS's.
I thing the file can put at /var/run on all Unix like OS's.
Or have someone other voice?


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