Call shell by absolute path in chroot
When using the --script-chroot option, chroot is called with just sh (relative path), relying on the host environment's $PATH to find the executable. At least on Arch Linux, this does not work, as Arch Linux by default does not have /bin in the PATH (/bin is just a symlink to /usr/bin). Since the chroot system was just built and it is know to contain /bin/sh, I think it makes sense to just call it explicitly here. Related to https://github.com/alpinelinux/alpine-make-rootfs/issues/10 Co-Authored-By: Conrad Hoffmann <ch@bitfehler.net>
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@ -498,7 +498,7 @@ if [ "$SCRIPT" ]; then
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else
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einfo "Executing script in chroot: $script_name $*"
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mount_bind "${SCRIPT%/*}" mnt/
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chroot . sh -c "cd /mnt && ./$script_name \"\$@\"" -- "$@" \
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chroot . /bin/sh -c "cd /mnt && ./$script_name \"\$@\"" -- "$@" \
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|| die 'Script failed'
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fi
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fi
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