Bash script for rebooting if string not found in the output of terminal program - bash

I came to this site for help in a task I couldn't find an answer for.
I need a script that reboots my computer is a string is not found in the output of a terminal program for, let's say, 30 seconds. That is, if the script doesn't find the name "joe" within 30 seconds, it will trigger the reboot command. Or if you want to look at it from another perspective, the script will reboot the machine unless the name "joe" is found in the output of terminal program within a given time period.
I have very little knowledge of bash scripting. Can anyone help?
Thanks in advance!
malandante

Use Expect
Use Expect rather than Bash to manage interactive scripts, or when you need to treat standard output as a stream.
#!/usr/bin/env expect
set timeout 30
spawn /path/to/script.sh
expect {
joe {}
# assumes current user has passwordless access to the reboot
# command as configured in /etc/sudoers
timeout { exec /usr/bin/sudo /sbin/reboot }
}
If you can reliably treat standard output from your script in a line-oriented fashion then you can use the Bash TMOUT variable to set a timeout on your read command, but there are a number of ways this can fail. Expect is really the right tool for the job.

Related

How to send input to a console/CLI program running on remote host using bash?

I have a script that I normally launch using the following syntax:
ssh -Yq user#host "xterm -e '. /home/user/bin/prog1 $arg1;prog2'"
(note: I've removed some of the complexities of the command, so please excuse if there are any syntax errors in the ssh command; it should not be relevant to the question)
This launches an xterm window that runs prog1, and after completion runs prog2. prog2 is a console-style program that performs some setup, then several seconds later waits for user input.
Is there a way via bash script (preferably without downloading external packages) that I can send data to prog2 that's running on $host?
I've looked into << and expect, but it's way over my head. My intuition is that there's probably a straightforward way of doing this, but I can't figure out what terms to search for. I also understand that I can remotely send keystrokes to a host using xdotools or something similar, but I'm hesitant to request a new package installation unless I know that's the only reasonable solution.
Thanks!

How to run shell script on VM indefinitely?

I have a VM that I want running indefinitely. The server is always running but I want the script to keep running after I log out. How would I go about doing so? Creating a cron job?
In general the following steps are sufficient to convince most Unix shells that the process you're launching should not depend on the continued existence of the shell:
run the command under nohup
run the command in the background
redirect all file descriptors that normally point to the terminal to other locations
So, if you want to run command-name, you should do it like so:
nohup command-name >/dev/null 2>/dev/null </dev/null &
This tells the process that will execute command-name to send all stdout and stderr to nowhere (instead of to your terminal) and also to read stdin from nowhere (instead of from your terminal). Of course if you actually have locations to write to/read from, you can certainly use those instead -- anything except the terminal is fine:
nohup command-name >outputFile 2>errorFile <inputFile &
See also the answer in Petur's comment, which discusses this issue a fair bit.

How to ssh into a shell and run a script and leave myself at the prompt

I am using elastic map reduce from Amazon. I am sshing into hadoop master node and executing a script like.
$EMR_BIN/elastic-mapreduce --jobflow $JOBFLOW --ssh < hivescript.sh . It sshes me into the master node and runs the hive script. The hivescript contains the following lines
hive
add jar joda-time-1.6.jar;
add jar EmrHiveUtils-1.2.jar;
and some commands to create hive tables. The script runs fine and creates the hive tables and everything else, but comes back to the prompt from where I ran the script. How do I leave it sshed into hadoop master node at the hive prompt.
Consider using Expect, then you could do something along these lines and interact at the end:
/usr/bin/expect <<EOF
spawn ssh ... YourHost
expect "password"
send "password\n"
send javastuff
interact
EOF
These are the most common answers I've seen (with the drawbacks I ran into with them):
Use expect
This is probably the most well rounded solution for most people
I cannot control whether expect is installed in my target environments
Just to try this out anyway, I put together a simple expect script to ssh to a remote machine, send a simple command, and turn control over to the user. There was a long delay before the prompt showed up, and after fiddling with it with little success I decided to move on for the time being.
Eventually I came back to this as the final solution after realizing I had violated one of the 3 virtues of a good programmer -- false impatience.
Use screen / tmux to start the shell, then inject commands from an external process.
This works ok, but if the terminal window dies it leaves a screen/tmux instance hanging around. I could certainly try to come up with a way to just re-attach to prior instances or kill them; screen (and probably tmux) can make it die instead of auto-detaching, but I didn't fiddle with it.
If using gnome-terminal, use its -x or --command flag (I'm guessing xterm and others have similar options)
I'll go into more detail on problems I had with this on #4
Make a bash script with #!/bin/bash --init-file as the shebang; this will cause your script to execute, then leave an interactive shell running afterward
This and #3 had issues with some programs that required user interaction before the shell is presented to them. Some programs (like ssh) it worked fine with, others (telnet, vxsim) presented a prompt but no text was passed along to the program; only ctrl characters like ^C.
Do something like this: xterm -e 'commands; here; exec bash'. This will cause it to create an interactive shell after your commands execute.
This is fine as long as the user doesn't attempt to interrupt with ^C before the last command executes.
Currently, the only thing I've found that gives me the behavior I need is to use cmdtool from the OpenWin project.
/usr/openwin/bin/cmdtool -I 'commands; here'
# or
/usr/openwin/bin/cmdtool -I 'commands; here' /bin/bash --norc
The resulting terminal injects the list of commands passed with -I to the program executed (no parms means default shell), so those commands show up in that shell's history.
What I don't like is that the terminal cmdtool provides feels so clunky ... but alas.

Avoid interactive mode in shell script

There is an interactive shell console, I can get into it, run specific set of commands inside the console and exit from it.
Now I want to write a bash script that connects to an interactive shell console and runs my commands silently, exits at the end without any interaction. This means I want to have everything automated in a non-interactive way. Any ideas how can I achieve this?
I am trying something like, say, blabla shell is the interactive console here, it always bring me to the interactive mode :(
/usr/bin/blabla shell << EOF
do A,
do B,
do C
quit
EOF
I have a long/specific version of this question can be found here ->
Configure flume in shell/bash script - avoid interactive flume shell console
Closing stdin should do the trick:
exec <&-
The expect command if your friend. It can emulate interactive communication with other commands even in very sophisticated way.
From man expect:
Expect is a program that "talks" to other interactive programs according to a script.
You can try putting the commands you would input in the interactive prompt into a file, then run the command like:
command < file
Maybe the Secure SHell, ssh does what you need. It requires that the "remote" machine is configured as an SSH server. I use it regularly to run commands on other hosts, such as
ssh user#host command

How to run a process in the background inside Gvim?

Well, what I need to do actually is CTRL-Z out of a process that got started from insert mode in GVim.
My command :Cdprun executes cdprun.sh which runs a sudo-ed daemon. I can add & at the end of the sudo-ed daemon call to run in the background and that works but the user doesn't get prompted for a password. Instead I want to just CTRL-Z out of it but the keyboard interrupt doesn't work. Any ideas? Thx.
You generally have two options in this case: generic is using something like vim-addon-async mentioned by #Nicalas Martin or vim with built-in interpreters support: tcl with expect module, python with pyexpect, perl with Expect, maybe something else (note: all of the mentioned packages are not shipped with tcl/python/perl). Second is specific to current situation: it is backgrounding in the other place. From your explanation I guessed that you have a script looking like
#!/bin/sh
<...>
sudo run-daemon --daemon-args # Last executed line
, am I right? Than you can just put backgrounding in another place: not
sudo run-daemon --daemon-args &
, but
sudo sh -c "nohup run-daemon --daemon-args &"
Here is a script to deal with asynchronous command in vim. Not a perfect solution but could be a good temporary solution. http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=3307

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