procd needs processes to stay in foreground to remain under its gaze and
control. Failure to do so means service stop commands fail to actually
stop the process (procd doesn't think it's running 'cos the process has
exited already as part of its forking routing)
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <ldir@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
PKG_NAME:=igmpproxy
PKG_VERSION:=0.2.1
-PKG_RELEASE:=1
+PKG_RELEASE:=2
PKG_SOURCE:=$(PKG_NAME)-$(PKG_VERSION).tar.gz
PKG_SOURCE_URL:=https://github.com/pali/igmpproxy/releases/download/${PKG_VERSION}/
[ -n "$has_upstream" ] || return
procd_open_instance
- procd_set_param command $PROG
+ procd_set_param command $PROG '-n'
[ -n "$logopts" ] && procd_append_param command $logopts
procd_append_param command $CONFIGFILE
procd_set_param file $CONFIGFILE