On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 03:03:21PM +0100, SanskritFritz wrote: > On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 12:18 PM, Lukas Fleischer > <archlinux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> a) You're not using bash (e.g. running rc.d(8) in sh(1)/$whatever). > >> b) You built bash manually and disabled process substitution support. > >> c) You're running bash in POSIX mode. > >> d) Something else happened. > > > > e) Someone hacked into your system and changed the shebang of all daemon > > scripts to "#!/bin/sh". > > Maybe > f) Your default shell is not bash? That doesn't matter unless he invokes the "rc.d" script in a pretty stupid way. The most likely reason is that the script in question has a "#!/bin/sh" shebang (even though the OP claimed that it happens with all daemon scripts)...