lib/sh/util.sh: set_global_fds(): moved stdlog fd setup to separate setup_log_fd() function, which runs at a much higher log_level (5 instead of 3). because the stdlog fd setup statements themselves are logged to fd 2 (because fd 30 is not yet open), you normally don't want to display these, if you are using fd 2 for errors only and fd 30 for logging.
lib/sh/util.sh: set_global_fds(): moved stdlog fd setup to separate setup_log_fd() function, which runs at a much higher log_level (5 instead of 3). because the stdlog fd setup statements themselves are logged to fd 2 (because fd 30 is not yet open), you normally don't want to display these, if you are using fd 2 for errors only and fd 30 for logging.