#!/bin/sh # NOTE: Close any non-standard fds, so that it doesn't come back to bite us in the ass with USBMS (or sockets) later... for fd in /proc/"$$"/fd/*; do close_me="false" fd_id="$(basename "${fd}")" fd_path="$(readlink -f "${fd}")" if [ -e "${fd}" ] && [ "${fd_id}" -gt 2 ]; then if [ -S "${fd}" ]; then # Close any and all sockets # NOTE: Old busybox builds do something stupid when attempting to canonicalize pipes/sockets... # (i.e., they'll spit out ${fd} as-is, losing any and all mention of a socket/pipe). fd_path="$(readlink "${fd}")" close_me="true" elif [ -p "${fd}" ]; then # We *might* be catching temporary pipes created by this very test, se we have to leave pipes alone... # Although it would take extremely unlucky timing, as by the time we go through the top-level -e test, # said temporary pipe is already gone, and as such we *should* never really enter this branch for temporary pipes ;). fd_path="$(readlink "${fd}")" close_me="false" else # NOTE: dash (meaning, in turn, busybox's ash) uses fd 10+ open to /dev/tty or $0 (w/ CLOEXEC) # NOTE: The last fd != fd_path check is there to (potentially) whitelist non-regular files we might have failed to handle, # it's designed to match the unhelpful result from old buysbox's readlink -f on non-regular files (c.f., previous notes). if [ "${fd_path}" != "/dev/tty" ] && [ "${fd_path}" != "$(readlink -f "${0}")" ] && [ "${fd}" != "${fd_path}" ]; then close_me="true" else close_me="false" fi fi fi if [ "${fd_id}" -gt 2 ]; then if [ "${close_me}" = "true" ]; then eval "exec ${fd_id}>&-" echo "[obtain-ip.sh] Closed fd ${fd_id} -> ${fd_path}" else # Try to log something more helpful when old busybox's readlink -f mangled it... if [ "${fd}" = "${fd_path}" ]; then fd_path="${fd_path} => $(readlink "${fd}")" if [ ! -e "${fd}" ]; then # Flag (potentially?) temporary items as such fd_path="${fd_path} (temporary?)" fi fi echo "[obtain-ip.sh] Left fd ${fd_id} -> ${fd_path} open" fi fi done ./release-ip.sh # NOTE: Prefer dhcpcd over udhcpc if available. That's what Nickel uses, # and udhcpc appears to trip some insanely wonky corner cases on current FW (#6421) if [ -x "/sbin/dhcpcd" ]; then dhcpcd -d -t 30 -w "${INTERFACE}" else udhcpc -S -i "${INTERFACE}" -s /etc/udhcpc.d/default.script -b -q fi