I have tried a method using timeout to identify and exit server comes to RUNNING state or else exit watching for RUNNING state at the timeout value, unfortunately one of the server has bash version 3 and doesn't support time out.
timeout 300s grep -q 'Server state changed to RUNNING' <(tail -f AdminServer.out)
if [ $? != 0];then
printf "\n===> unable to bring up the server.please check\n"
else
printf "\n===> server came to RUNNING state\n"
fi
I have tried the following but wasn't able to exit when the log is appeared
( cmdpid=$BASHPID; (sleep 60; kill $cmdpid) & exec `grep -q 'Server state changed to RUNNING' <(tail -f AdminServer.out)`)
but it first give command line substitution error for grep -q 'Server state changed to RUNNING' <(tail -f AdminServer.out) and then gives error for kill usage like below(seems the kill is not working) ,
kill: usage: kill [-s sigspec | etc....
I'm not in a position to upgrade the bash version of the server unfortunately, any guidance for this highly appreciated .Thank you!!
*server: suse distribution 2.6.32.12-0.7-default
Consider to try something like this:
data=$(
tail -f AdminServer.out & pid=$!
till=$[SECONDS+300]
while ((SECONDS<till)); do :; done
kill -9 $pid
)
grep -q 'Server state changed to RUNNING' <<< "$data" \
&& printf "\n===> server came to RUNNING state\n" \
|| printf "\n===> unable to bring up the server.please check\n"
When I was young... on OSF1, DEC Alpha, SPARC...
without timeout command, without <(...) or <<< operators...
I'm actively waiting...
File: timeout.sh
#! /bin/bash
PID="$1"
SEC="$2"
FILE="$3"
DATE_REF=$(date +%s)
DATE_MAX=$(( DATE_REF + ${SEC} ))
while ps -p "${PID}" >/dev/null 2>&1 && [[ $(date +%s) -lt ${DATE_MAX} ]] && ! grep OK "${FILE}" >/dev/null 2>&1; do
sleep 1
done
if grep OK "${FILE}" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
RET=0
else
RET=1
fi
if ps -p "${PID}" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
kill -9 "${PID}"
fi
rm -f "${FILE}"
exit $RET
Used like that:
nb_seconds_to_wait=5
tail -f my_log_file | grep -m 1 my_token_to_search && echo "OK" > my_flag_file &
timeout.sh $! nb_seconds_to_wait my_flag_file
if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
echo "Found"
else
echo "Not found"
fi
I have tried again and came up with the following, am I doing anything harmful here?
( cmdpid=$BASHPID; ( sleep 10; if ps -p $cmdpid > /dev/null; then kill $cmdpid > /dev/null;fi ) & while `tail -f -n0 AdminServer.out | grep -q RUNNING`; do exit 0;done )
echo "proceeding with the rest of commands the previous command status is $?"
I'm writing a bash script to stop start my postgres DB service. Initially I succeeded in creating one, but as soon I enabled SSL certificate it prompts to enter the phrase password.
I know the easiest solution is to use expect , but in my environment i am not authorized to use it.
Can someone help me out in scripting as to how can I supply the PEM PHRASE password without a user intervention.
This is what I have worked so far.
-bash-4.2$ cat start_postgres_db.sh
cd `dirname $0`
. `dirname $0`/parameter.env
${POSTGREBIN}/pg_ctl -D ${POSTGREDATAPATH} start -w
while true
do
sleep 1
loopcnt=0
loopcnt=`expr ${loopcnt} + 1`
PRCCNT=`ps -ef | grep ${DBEXENAME} | grep -v grep|wc -l`
if [ ${PRCCNT} -eq 1 ]
then
echo "PostgreSQL process started sucessfully"
exit
fi
if [ ${loopcnt} -gt 11 ]
then
echo "PostgreSQL process not started successfully"
echo "su to postgres and run ${POSTGREBIN}/pg_ctl -D ${POSTGREDATAPATH} restart"
exit
fi
done
Execution:
bash-4.2$ ./start_postgres_db.sh
waiting for server to start....Enter PEM pass phrase:.........
You can provide a password to pg_ctl as argument on the command line with the option -P. I will assume it is contained in the variable ${POSTGREPASSWORD}.
start_postgres_db.sh
cd `dirname $0`
. `dirname $0`/parameter.env
${POSTGREBIN}/pg_ctl start -w -D ${POSTGREDATAPATH} -P ${POSTGREPASSWORD}
while true; do
sleep 1
(( loopcnt++ ))
PRCCNT=$(ps -ef | grep ${DBEXENAME} | grep -v grep | wc -l)
if [ ${PRCCNT} -eq 1 ]; then
echo "PostgreSQL process started sucessfully"
exit 0
fi
if [ ${loopcnt} -gt 11 ]; then
echo "PostgreSQL process not started successfully"
echo "su to postgres and run ${POSTGREBIN}/pg_ctl -D ${POSTGREDATAPATH} restart"
exit 1
fi
done
All I want from this script is to ssh to the host, and check if the process is alive, and if it is not, I want the littel script to die.
Does not die though. It stops, and then starts up again on the ssh is successful again.
I want death though.
#!/bin/bash
iterate=0
while [ $iterate -le 20000 ]
do
rc=$?
ssh -q -T coolhost "ps -ef | egrep '[i]cool-process' | grep wrapper "
if [[ $rc -eq 0 ]] ; then
sleep 2
iterate=$((iterate+1 ))
else
break
exit 1
fi
done
It will iterate to 2000, however if the remote process breaks, it will not die. It will not break and exit.
this will work - but won't sleep - if I put a sleep the rc goes to 0 and is never dies.
so this works but is too basic.
#!/bin/bash
set -e
while : ; do
ssh -q -T coolhost "ps -ef | egrep '[i]cool-process' | grep wrapper" > /dev/null 2>&1
done
You set rc=$? before the ssh command, and the last command was the test ([) command, which just succeeded, so when you test if [[ $rc -eq 0 ]] the answer is always 'yes, it does'.
It's best to test the status of ssh directly:
#!/bin/bash
iterate=0
while [ $iterate -le 20000 ]
do
if ssh -q -T coolhost "ps -ef | egrep '[i]cool-process' | grep wrapper"; then
sleep 2
((iterate++))
else
break # or exit 1
fi
done
with all the kind replies to my last question I have been able to create a small script to check temperatures on my NAS but now I am struggling on sending it to the background. When I try to start my script with
sh temp_check.sh start
I get an error pointing to this line
$0 background &
and I can't figure out why :/
This is my whole script
#!/ffp/bin/sh
#
#check CPU and HDD temperature and shutdown if too hot
#Settings
cpu_high=60
hdd_high=50
NAME="temp_check"
PIDFILE="/var/run/$NAME.pid"
Background() {
echo $$ >$PIDFILE
exec >/dev/null 2>&1
trap "rm -f $PIDFILE ; exit 0" INT TERM EXIT
while true; do
STATE=$(hdparm -C /dev/sda1 | grep "drive state" | awk '{print $4}')
if [ "$STATE" = "active/idle" ]; then
hdd_temp=$(/usr/local/zy-pkgs/bin/smartctl -A -d marvell /dev/sda | grep 194 | cut -d: -f3 | awk '{print $10}')
cpu_temp=$(i2cget -y 0x0 0x0a 0x07)
printf -v cpu_res "%d" "$cpu_temp"
if [[ $cpu_res -lt $cpu_high && $hdd_temp -lt $hdd_high ]]; then
#echo "CPU und HDD Temperaturen in Ordnung"
sleep 30
else
halt
fi
else
cpu_temp=$(i2cget -y 0x0 0x0a 0x07)
printf -v cpu_res "%d" "$cpu_temp"
if [ $cpu_res -lt $cpu_high ]; then
#echo "CPU Temperatur in Ordnung - HDD im Standby Modus"
sleep 30
else
halt
fi
fi
done
}
case $1 in
start)
[ -f $PIDFILE ] && [ -f /proc/` cat $PIDFILE `/cmdline ] && echo "already running. Aborting." && exit 1
$0 background &
echo "Starting $NAME..."
;;
stop)
kill -9 ` cat $PIDFILE ` >/dev/null 2>&1
echo "Stopping $NAME ` cat $PIDFILE ` "
;;
status)
[ -f $PIDFILE ] && [ -f /proc/` cat $PIDFILE `/cmdline ] && echo "running as ` cat $PIDFILE ` " && exit 0
echo "not running"
;;
background)
Background
;;
*)
echo "use $0 [ start | stop | status ]"
;;
esac
Any help is appreciated
Cheers
Moritz
One possible error is, that the script is not executable. If this is the case, you can either fix the line to
/bin/sh $0 background &
or make the script executable with
chmod a+x temp_check.sh
maybe it helps, if you change your Background() function to something like
Background()
{ (
...
) &
}
and just call Background in your "start". That's much simpler.
This question already has answers here:
Linux Script to check if process is running and act on the result
(8 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
I wrote a bash-script to check if a process is running. It doesn't work since the ps command always returns exit code 1. When I run the ps command from the command-line, the $? is correctly set, but within the script it is always 1. Any idea?
#!/bin/bash
SERVICE=$1
ps -a | grep -v grep | grep $1 > /dev/null
result=$?
echo "exit code: ${result}"
if [ "${result}" -eq "0" ] ; then
echo "`date`: $SERVICE service running, everything is fine"
else
echo "`date`: $SERVICE is not running"
fi
Bash version: GNU bash, version 3.2.25(1)-release (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu)
There are a few really simple methods:
pgrep procname && echo Running
pgrep procname || echo Not running
killall -q -0 procname && echo Running
pidof procname && echo Running
This trick works for me. Hope this could help you. Let's save the followings as checkRunningProcess.sh
#!/bin/bash
ps_out=`ps -ef | grep $1 | grep -v 'grep' | grep -v $0`
result=$(echo $ps_out | grep "$1")
if [[ "$result" != "" ]];then
echo "Running"
else
echo "Not Running"
fi
Make the checkRunningProcess.sh executable.And then use it.
Example to use.
20:10 $ checkRunningProcess.sh proxy.py
Running
20:12 $ checkRunningProcess.sh abcdef
Not Running
I tried your version on BASH version 3.2.29, worked fine. However, you could do something like the above suggested, an example here:
#!/bin/sh
SERVICE="$1"
RESULT=`ps -ef | grep $1 | grep -v 'grep' | grep -v $0`
result=$(echo $ps_out | grep "$1")
if [[ "$result" != "" ]];then
echo "Running"
else
echo "Not Running"
fi
I use this one to check every 10 seconds process is running and start if not and allows multiple arguments:
#!/bin/sh
PROCESS="$1"
PROCANDARGS=$*
while :
do
RESULT=`pgrep ${PROCESS}`
if [ "${RESULT:-null}" = null ]; then
echo "${PROCESS} not running, starting "$PROCANDARGS
$PROCANDARGS &
else
echo "running"
fi
sleep 10
done
Check if your scripts name doesn't contain $SERVICE. If it does, it will be shown in ps results, causing script to always think that service is running. You can grep it against current filename like this:
#!/bin/sh
SERVICE=$1
if ps ax | grep -v grep | grep -v $0 | grep $SERVICE > /dev/null
then
echo "$SERVICE service running, everything is fine"
else
echo "$SERVICE is not running"
fi
Working one.
!/bin/bash
CHECK=$0
SERVICE=$1
DATE=`date`
OUTPUT=$(ps aux | grep -v grep | grep -v $CHECK |grep $1)
echo $OUTPUT
if [ "${#OUTPUT}" -gt 0 ] ;
then echo "$DATE: $SERVICE service running, everything is fine"
else echo "$DATE: $SERVICE is not running"
fi
Despite some success with the /dev/null approach in bash. When I pushed the solution to cron it failed. Checking the size of a returned command worked perfectly though. The ampersrand allows bash to exit.
#!/bin/bash
SERVICE=/path/to/my/service
result=$(ps ax|grep -v grep|grep $SERVICE)
echo ${#result}
if ${#result}> 0
then
echo " Working!"
else
echo "Not Working.....Restarting"
/usr/bin/xvfb-run -a /opt/python27/bin/python2.7 SERVICE &
fi
#!/bin/bash
ps axho comm| grep $1 > /dev/null
result=$?
echo "exit code: ${result}"
if [ "${result}" -eq "0" ] ; then
echo "`date`: $SERVICE service running, everything is fine"
else
echo "`date`: $SERVICE is not running"
/etc/init.d/$1 restart
fi
Something like this
Those are helpful hints. I just needed to know if a service was running when I started the script, so I could leave the service in the same state when I left. I ended up using this:
HTTPDSERVICE=$(ps -A | grep httpd | head -1)
[ -z "$HTTPDSERVICE" ] && echo "No apache service running."
I found the problem. ps -ae instead ps -a works.
I guess it has to do with my rights in the shared hosting environment. There's apparently a difference between executing "ps -a" from the command line and executing it from within a bash-script.
A simple script version of one of Andor's above suggestions:
!/bin/bash
pgrep $1 && echo Running
If the above script is called test.sh then, in order to test, type:
test.sh NameOfProcessToCheck
e.g.
test.sh php
I was wondering if it would be a good idea to have progressive attempts at a process, so you pass this func a process name func_terminate_process "firefox" and it tires things more nicely first, then moves on to kill.
# -- NICE: try to use killall to stop process(s)
killall ${1} > /dev/null 2>&1 ;sleep 10
# -- if we do not see the process, just end the function
pgrep ${1} > /dev/null 2>&1 || return
# -- UGLY: Step trough every pid and use kill -9 on them individually
for PID in $(pidof ${1}) ;do
echo "Terminating Process: [${1}], PID [${PID}]"
kill -9 ${PID} ;sleep 10
# -- NASTY: If kill -9 fails, try SIGTERM on PID
if ps -p ${PID} > /dev/null ;then
echo "${PID} is still running, forcefully terminating with SIGTERM"
kill -SIGTERM ${PID} ;sleep 10
fi
done
# -- If after all that, we still see the process, report that to the screen.
pgrep ${1} > /dev/null 2>&1 && echo "Error, unable to terminate all or any of [${1}]" || echo "Terminate process [${1}] : SUCCESSFUL"
I need to do this from time to time and end up hacking the command line until it works.
For example, here I want to see if I have any SSH connections, (the 8th column returned by "ps" is the running "path-to-procname" and is filtered by "awk":
ps | awk -e '{ print $8 }' | grep ssh | sed -e 's/.*\///g'
Then I put it in a shell-script, ("eval"-ing the command line inside of backticks), like this:
#!/bin/bash
VNC_STRING=`ps | awk -e '{ print $8 }' | grep vnc | sed -e 's/.*\///g'`
if [ ! -z "$VNC_STRING" ]; then
echo "The VNC STRING is not empty, therefore your process is running."
fi
The "sed" part trims the path to the exact token and might not be necessary for your needs.
Here's my example I used to get your answer. I wrote it to automatically create 2 SSH tunnels and launch a VNC client for each.
I run it from my Cygwin shell to do admin to my backend from my windows workstation, so I can jump to UNIX/LINUX-land with one command, (this also assumes the client rsa keys have already been "ssh-copy-id"-ed and are known to the remote host).
It's idempotent in that each proc/command only fires when their $VAR eval's to an empty string.
It appends " | wc -l" to store the number of running procs that match, (i.e., number of lines found), instead of proc-name for each $VAR to suit my needs. I keep the "echo" statements so I can re-run and diagnose the state of both connections.
#!/bin/bash
SSH_COUNT=`eval ps | awk -e '{ print $8 }' | grep ssh | sed -e 's/.*\///g' | wc -l`
VNC_COUNT=`eval ps | awk -e '{ print $8 }' | grep vnc | sed -e 's/.*\///g' | wc -l`
if [ $SSH_COUNT = "2" ]; then
echo "There are already 2 SSH tunnels."
elif [ $SSH_COUNT = "1" ]; then
echo "There is only 1 SSH tunnel."
elif [ $SSH_COUNT = "0" ]; then
echo "connecting 2 SSH tunnels."
ssh -L 5901:localhost:5901 -f -l USER1 HOST1 sleep 10;
ssh -L 5904:localhost:5904 -f -l USER2 HOST2 sleep 10;
fi
if [ $VNC_COUNT = "2" ]; then
echo "There are already 2 VNC sessions."
elif [ $VNC_COUNT = "1" ]; then
echo "There is only 1 VNC session."
elif [ $VNC_COUNT = "0" ]; then
echo "launching 2 vnc sessions."
vncviewer.exe localhost:1 &
vncviewer.exe localhost:4 &
fi
This is very perl-like to me and possibly more unix utils than true shell scripting. I know there are lots of "MAGIC" numbers and cheezy hard-coded values but it works, (I think I'm also in poor taste for using so much UPPERCASE too). Flexibility can be added with some cmd-line args to make this more versatile but I wanted to share what worked for me. Please improve and share. Cheers.
A solution with service and awk that takes in a comma-delimited list of service names.
First it's probably a good bet you'll need root privileges to do what you want. If you don't need to check then you can remove that part.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# First parameter is a comma-delimited string of service names i.e. service1,service2,service3
SERVICES=$1
ALL_SERVICES_STARTED=true
if [ $EUID -ne 0 ]; then
if [ "$(id -u)" != "0" ]; then
echo "root privileges are required" 1>&2
exit 1
fi
exit 1
fi
for service in ${SERVICES//,/ }
do
STATUS=$(service ${service} status | awk '{print $2}')
if [ "${STATUS}" != "started" ]; then
echo "${service} not started"
ALL_SERVICES_STARTED=false
fi
done
if ${ALL_SERVICES_STARTED} ; then
echo "All services started"
exit 0
else
echo "Check Failed"
exit 1
fi
The most simple check by process name :
bash -c 'checkproc ssh.exe ; while [ $? -eq 0 ] ; do echo "proc running";sleep 10; checkproc ssh.exe; done'