Linux Script not Running Upon Reboot - ruby

I know, I know. These posts appear all the dang time. I swear, my machine/code is an exception to what most people are trying to accomplish/what problem(s) they're running into when attempting to set up these seemingly simple scripts.
I have a file named IPdetermination.rb on my Raspberry Pi (running the Raspbian OS) that basically uses the rest-client ruby gem to perform a http POST with JSON. Such is the code:
#sends a message to slack using incoming-webhook that identifies that
#host machine's name and ip address.
require 'rest-client'
address = Socket.ip_address_list.detect {|x| x.ipv4_private?}.ip_address
name = Socket.gethostname
if name.include? '.' then name = name.slice(0..name.index('.') - 1) end
payload = {text: "*Device:* `#{name}`\n *IP:* `#{address}`"}.to_json
RestClient.post 'https://hooks.slack.com/services/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', payload
Note that this does work. So, in fact, does this bash script, which is stored under /etc/init.d
#! /bin/bash
# /etc/init.d/ip_addr
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: ip_addr
# Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
# Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Short-Description: ip address locator
# Description: sends hostname's ip address on private slack channel
### END INIT INFO
exec ruby ~/Documents/coding/ruby/IPdetermination.rb
exit 0
They both work when manually executed, successfully posting a message on Slack. Note that I have both attached LSB comments to the ip_addr script and configured the file such so that running ls -l returns -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 413 Dec 30 03:39 ip_addr. Running chkconfig --list correctly displays ip_addr 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:on 4:on 5:on 6:off.
Yet
It doesn't work! Rebooting the system does not seem to run the script. My only theory could be that the POSTing could be faulty upon reboot, yet I cannot determine whether or not this is the source of the problem. What do I do?
Edit: Changing the Required-Start: and Required-Stop: to also include the boot facilities $network and $named did not work either.

afaik scripts under /etc/init.d/ are not executed upon reboot. there need to be at least symbolic links set in the runlevel directories /etc/rc*.d/ prefixed with an S if you want to run a script upon boot when entering the specific runlevel. if prefixed with K it means something like kill so it won't be executed upon boot or gets killed on shutdown. numerical values appended to these main prefix let you define an order in which the scripts are run on boot.
so if you want to run ascript on boot when entering run level two you need to do sth like:
$ ln -s /etc/init.d/ascript /etc/rc2.d/S01ascript
this will cause ascript to be run first when entering runlevel 2.
any update mechanism like update-rc.d or systemctl enable ... will just set such links to make scripts avaiable/called on boot.
hope this helps. regards

Ok, finally found the problem, thanks to users like #tasasaki. What happened was I added a line within /etc/rc.local that called my bash script with a full path name, as well as editing the bash script to have full path names. Also, within rc.local, I didn't realize exit 0 is only put down once, so I put my code after the exit 0. Moving it up probably helped as well. Should anyone find this, hope it helps!

Related

Cron job does not execute a bash file that use sqlcmd [duplicate]

I have set up a cronjob for root user in ubuntu environment as follows by typing crontab -e
34 11 * * * sh /srv/www/live/CronJobs/daily.sh
0 08 * * 2 sh /srv/www/live/CronJobs/weekly.sh
0 08 1 * * sh /srv/www/live/CronJobs/monthly.sh
But the cronjob does not run. I have tried checking if the cronjob is running using pgrep cron and that gives process id 3033. The shell script calls a python file and is used to send an email. Running the python file is ok. There's no error in it but the cron doesn't run. The daily.sh file has the following code in it.
python /srv/www/live/CronJobs/daily.py
python /srv/www/live/CronJobs/notification_email.py
python /srv/www/live/CronJobs/log_kpi.py
WTF?! My cronjob doesn't run?!
Here's a checklist guide to debug not running cronjobs:
Is the Cron daemon running?
Run ps ax | grep cron and look for cron.
Debian: service cron start or service cron restart
Is cron working?
* * * * * /bin/echo "cron works" >> /tmp/file
Syntax correct? See below.
You obviously need to have write access to the file you are redirecting the output to. A unique file name in /tmp which does not currently exist should always be writable.
Probably also add 2>&1 to include standard error as well as standard output, or separately output standard error to another file with 2>>/tmp/errors
Is the command working standalone?
Check if the script has an error, by doing a dry run on the CLI
When testing your command, test as the user whose crontab you are editing, which might not be your login or root
Can cron run your job?
Check /var/log/cron.log or /var/log/messages for errors.
Ubuntu: grep CRON /var/log/syslog
Redhat: /var/log/cron
Check permissions
Set executable flag on the command: chmod +x /var/www/app/cron/do-stuff.php
If you redirect the output of your command to a file, verify you have permission to write to that file/directory
Check paths
Check she-bangs / hashbangs line
Do not rely on environment variables like PATH, as their value will likely not be the same under cron as under an interactive session. See How to get CRON to call in the correct PATHs
Don't suppress output while debugging
Commonly used is this suppression: 30 1 * * * command > /dev/null 2>&1
Re-enable the standard output or standard error message output by removing >/dev/null 2>&1 altogether; or perhaps redirect to a file in a location where you have write access: >>cron.out 2>&1 will append standard output and standard error to cron.out in the invoking user's home directory.
If you don't redirect output from a cron job, the daemon will try to send you any output or error messages by email. Check your inbox (maybe simply more $MAIL if you don't have a mail client). If mail is not available, maybe check for a file named dead.letter in your home directory, or system log entries saying that the output was discarded. Especially in the latter case, probably edit the job to add redirection to a file, then wait for the job to run, and examine the log file for error messages or other useful feedback.
If you are trying to figure out why something failed, the error messages will be visible in this file. Read it and understand it.
Still not working? Yikes!
Raise the cron debug level
Debian
in /etc/default/cron
set EXTRA_OPTS="-L 2"
service cron restart
tail -f /var/log/syslog to see the scripts executed
Ubuntu
in /etc/rsyslog.d/50-default.conf
add or comment out line cron.* /var/log/cron.log
reload logger sudo /etc/init.d/rsyslog restart
re-run cron
open /var/log/cron.log and look for detailed error output
Reminder: deactivate log level, when you are done with debugging
Run cron and check log files again
Cronjob Syntax
# Minute Hour Day of Month Month Day of Week User Command
# (0-59) (0-23) (1-31) (1-12 or Jan-Dec) (0-6 or Sun-Sat)
0 2 * * * root /usr/bin/find
This syntax is only correct for the root user. Regular user crontab syntax doesn't have the User field (regular users aren't allowed to run code as any other user);
# Minute Hour Day of Month Month Day of Week Command
# (0-59) (0-23) (1-31) (1-12 or Jan-Dec) (0-6 or Sun-Sat)
0 2 * * * /usr/bin/find
Crontab Commands
crontab -l
Lists all the user's cron tasks.
crontab -e, for a specific user: crontab -e -u agentsmith
Starts edit session of your crontab file.
When you exit the editor, the modified crontab is installed automatically.
crontab -r
Removes your crontab entry from the cron spooler, but not from crontab file.
Another reason crontab will fail: Special handling of the % character.
From the manual file:
The entire command portion of the line, up to a newline or a
"%" character, will be executed by /bin/sh or by the shell specified
in the SHELL variable of the cronfile. A "%" character in the
command, unless escaped with a backslash (\), will be changed into
newline characters, and all data after the first % will be sent to
the command as standard input.
In my particular case, I was using date --date="7 days ago" "+%Y-%m-%d" to produce parameters to my script, and it was failing silently. I finally found out what was going on when I checked syslog and saw my command was truncated at the % symbol. You need to escape it like this:
date --date="7 days ago" "+\%Y-\%m-\%d"
See here for more details:
http://www.ducea.com/2008/11/12/using-the-character-in-crontab-entries/
Finally I found the solution. Following is the solution:-
Never use relative path in python scripts to be executed via crontab.
I did something like this instead:-
import os
import sys
import time, datetime
CLASS_PATH = '/srv/www/live/mainapp/classes'
SETTINGS_PATH = '/srv/www/live/foodtrade'
sys.path.insert(0, CLASS_PATH)
sys.path.insert(1,SETTINGS_PATH)
import other_py_files
Never supress the crontab code instead use mailserver and check the mail for the user. That gives clearer insights of what is going.
I want to add 2 points that I learned:
Cron config files put in /etc/cron.d/ should not contain a dot (.). Otherwise, it won't be read by cron.
If the user running your command is not in /etc/shadow. It won't be allowed to schedule cron.
Refs:
http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/xenial/en/man8/cron.8.html
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/CronHowto
To add another point, a file in /etc/cron.d must contain an empty new line at the end. This is likely related to the response by Luciano which specifies that:
The entire command portion of the line, up to a newline or a "%"
character, will be executed
I found useful debugging information on an Ubuntu 16.04 server by running:
systemctl status cron.service
In my case I was kindly informed I had left a comment '#' off of a remark line:
Aug 18 19:12:01 is-feb19 cron[14307]: Error: bad minute; while reading /etc/crontab
Aug 18 19:12:01 is-feb19 cron[14307]: (*system*) ERROR (Syntax error, this crontab file will be ignored)
It might also be a timezone problem.
Cron uses the local time.
Run the command timedatectl to see the machine time and make sure that your crontab is in this same timezone.
https://askubuntu.com/a/536489/1043751
I had a similar problem to the link below.
similar to my problem
my original post
My Issue
My issue was that cron / crontab wouldn't execute my bash script. that bash script executed a python script.
original bash file
#!/bin/bash
python /home/frosty/code/test_scripts/test.py
python file (test.py)
from datetime import datetime
def main():
dt_now = datetime.now()
string_now = dt_now.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f')
with open('./text_file.txt', 'a') as f:
f.write(f'wrote at {string_now}\n')
return None
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
the error I was getting
File "/home/frosty/code/test_scripts/test.py", line 7
string_to_write = f'wrote at {string_now}\n'
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
this error didn't make sense because the code executed without error from the bash file and the python file.
** Note -> ensure in the crontab -e file you don't suppress the output. I sent the output to a file by adding >>/path/to/cron/output/file.log 2>&1 after the command. below is my crontab -e entry
*/5 * * * * /home/frosty/code/test_scripts/echo_message_sh >>/home/frosty/code/test_scripts/cron_out.log 2>&1
the issue
cron was using the wrong python interpreter, probably python 2 from the syntax error.
how I solved the problem
I changed my bash file to the following
#!/bin/bash
conda_shell=/home/frosty/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh
conda_env=base
source ${conda_shell}
conda activate ${conda_env}
python /home/frosty/code/test_scripts/test.py
And I changed my python file to the following
from datetime import datetime
def main():
dt_now = datetime.now()
string_now = dt_now.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f')
string_file = '/home/frosty/code/test_scripts/text_file.txt'
string_to_write = 'wrote at {}\n'.format(string_now)
with open(string_file, 'a') as f:
f.write(string_to_write)
return None
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
No MTA installed, discarding output
I had a similar problem with a PHP file executed as a CRON job.
When I manually execute the file it works, but not with CRON tab.
I got the output message: "No MTA installed, discarding output"
Postfix is the default Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) in Ubuntu and can be installed it using
sudo apt-get install postfix
But this same message can be also output when you add a log file as below and it does not have proper write permission to /path/to/logfile.log
/path/to/php -f /path/to/script.php >> /path/to/logfile.log
The permission issue can occur if you create the cron-log file manually using a command like touch while you are logged in as a different user and you add CRONs in the tab of another user(group) like www-data using: sudo crontab -u www-data -e. Then CRON daemon tries to write to the log file and fail, then tries to send the output as an email using Ubuntu's MTA and when it's not found, outputs "No MTA installed, discarding output".
To prevent this:
Create the file with proper permission.
Avoid creating the relevant CRON log file manually, add the log in CRON tab and let the log file get created automatically when the cron is run.
I've found another reason for user's crontab not running: the hostname is not present on the hosts file:
user#ubuntu:~$ cat /etc/hostname
ubuntu
Now the hosts file:
user#ubuntu:~$ cat /etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 localhost
# The following lines are desirable for IPv6 capable hosts
::1 ip6-localhost ip6-loopback
fe00::0 ip6-localnet
ff00::0 ip6-mcastprefix
ff02::1 ip6-allnodes
ff02::2 ip6-allrouters
ff02::3 ip6-allhosts
This is on a Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS, the way to fix it is adding the hostname to the hosts file so it resembles something like this:
user#ubuntu:~$ cat /etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 ubuntu localhost
# The following lines are desirable for IPv6 capable hosts
::1 ip6-localhost ip6-loopback
fe00::0 ip6-localnet
ff00::0 ip6-mcastprefix
ff02::1 ip6-allnodes
ff02::2 ip6-allrouters
ff02::3 ip6-allhosts
For me, the solution was that the file cron was trying to run was in an encrypted directory, more specifcically a user diretory on /home/. Although the crontab was configured as root, because the script being run exisited in an encrypted user directory in /home/ cron could only read this directory when the user was actually logged in. To see if the directory is encrypted check if this directory exists:
/home/.ecryptfs/<yourusername>
if so then you have an encrypted home directory.
The fix for me was to move the script in to a non=encrypted directory and everythig worked fine.
As this is becoming a canonical for troubleshooting cron issues, allow me to add one specific but rather complex issue: If you are attempting to run a GUI program from cron, you are probably Doing It Wrong.
A common symptom is receiving error messages about DISPLAY being unset, or the cron job's process being unable to access the display.
In brief, this means that the program you are trying to run is attempting to render something on an X11 (or Wayland etc) display, and failing, because cron is not attached to a graphical environment, or in fact any kind of input/output facility at all, beyond being able to read and write files, and send email if the system is configured to allow that.
For the purposes of "I'm unable to run my graphical cron job", let's just point out in broad strokes three common scenarios for this problem.
Probably identify the case you are trying to implement, and search for related questions about that particular scenario to learn more, and find actual solutions with actual code.
If you are trying to develop an interactive program which communicates with a user, you want to rethink your approach. A common, but nontrivial, arrangement is to split the program in two: A back-end service which can run from cron, but which does not have any user-visible interactive facilities, and a front-end client which the user runs from their GUI when they want to communicate with the back-end service.
Probably your user client should simply be added to the user(s)' GUI startup script if it needs to be, or they want to, run automatically when they log in.
I suppose the back-end service could be started from cron, but if it requires a GUI to be useful, maybe start it from the X11 server's startup scripts instead; and if not, probably run it from a regular startup script (systemd these days, or /etc/rc.local or a similar system startup directory more traditionally).1
If you are trying to run a GUI program without interacting with a real user 2, you may be able to set up a "headless" X11 server 3 and run a cron job which starts up that server, runs your job, and quits.
Probably your job should simply run a suitable X11 server from cron (separate from any interactive X11 server which manages the actual physical display(s) and attached graphics card(s) and keyboard(s) available to the system), and pass it a configuration which runs the client(s) you want to run once it's up and running. (See also the next point for some practical considerations.)
You are running a computer for the sole purpose of displaying a specific application in a GUI, and you want to start that application when the computer is booted.
Probably your startup scripts should simply run the GUI (X11 or whatever) and hook into its startup script to also run the client program once the GUI is up and running. In other words, you don't need cron here; just configure the startup scripts to run the desktop GUI, and configure the desktop GUI to run your application as part of the (presumably automatic, guest?) login sequence.4
There are ways to run X11 programs on the system's primary display (DISPLAY=:0.0) but doing that from a cron job is often problematic, as that display is usually reserved for actual interactive use by the first user who logs in and starts a graphical desktop. On a single-user system, you might be able to live with the side effects if that user is also you, but this tends to have inconvenient consequences and scale very poorly.
An additional complication is deciding which user to run the cron job as. A shared system resource like a back-end service can and probably should be run by root (though ideally have a dedicated system account which it switches into once it has acquired access to any privileged resources it needs) but anything involving a GUI should definitely not be run as root at any point.
A related, but distinct problem is to interact in any meaningful way with the user. If you can identify the user's active session (to the extent that this is even well-defined in the first place), how do you grab their attention without interfering with whatever else they are in the middle of? But more fundamentally, how do you even find them? If they are not logged in at all, what do you do then? If they are, how do you determine that they are active and available? If they are logged in more than once, which terminal are they using, and is it safe to interrupt that session? Similarly, if they are logged in to the GUI, they might miss a window you spring up on the local console, if they are actually logged in remotely via VNC or a remote X11 server.
As a further aside: On dedicated servers (web hosting services, supercomputing clusters, etc) you might even be breaking the terms of service of the hosting company or institution if you install an interactive graphical desktop you can connect to from the outside world, or even at all.
1
The #reboot hook in cron is a convenience for regular users who don't have any other facility for running something when the system comes up, but it's just inconvenient and obscure to hide something there if you are root anyway and have complete control over the system. Use the system facilities to launch system services.
2
A common use case is running a web browser which needs to run a full GUI client, but which is being controlled programmatically and which doesn't really need to display anything anywhere, for example to scrape sites which use Javascript and thus require a full graphical browser to render the information you want to extract.
Another is poorly designed scientific or office software which was not written for batch use, and thus requires a GUI even when you just want to run a batch job and then immediately quit without any actual need to display anything anywhere.
(In the latter case, probably review the documentation to check if there isn't a --batch or --noninteractive or --headless or --script or --eval option or similar to run the tool without the GUI, or perhaps a separate utility for noninteractive use.)
3
Xvfb is the de facto standard solution; it runs a "virtual framebuffer" where the computer can spit out pixels as if to a display, but which isn't actually connected to any display hardware.
4
There are several options here.
The absolutely simplest is to set up the system to automatically log in a specific user at startup without a password prompt, and configure that user's desktop environment (Gnome or KDE or XFCE or what have you) to run your script from its "Startup Items" or "Login Actions" or "Autostart" or whatever the facility might be called. If you need more control over the environment, maybe run bare X11 without a desktop environment or window manager at all, and just run your script instead. Or in some cases, maybe replace the X11 login manager ("greeter") with something custom built.
The X11 stack is quite modular, and there are several hooks in various layers where you could run a script either as part of a standard startup process, or one which completely replaces a standard layer. These things tend to differ somewhat between distros and implementations, and over time, so this answer is necessarily vague and incomplete around these matters. Again, probably try to find an existing question about how to do things for your specific platform (Ubuntu, Raspbian, Gnome, KDE, what?) and scenario. For simple scenarios, perhaps see Ubuntu - run bash script on startup with visible terminal
I experienced same problem where crons are not running.
We fixed by changing permissions and owner by
Crons made root owner as we had mentioned in crontab AND
Cronjobs 644 permission given
There is already a lot of answers, but none of them helped me so I'll add mine here in case it's useful for somebody else.
In my situation, my cronjobs were working find until there was a power shortage that cut the power to my Raspberry Pi. Cron got corrupted. I think it was running a long python script exactly when the shortage happened. Nothing in the main answer above worked for me. The solution was however quite simple. I just had to force reinstallation of cron with:
sudo apt-get --reinstall install cron
It work right away after this.
Copying my answer for a duplicated question here.
cron may not know where to find the Python interpreter because it doesn't share your user account's environment variables.
There are 3 solutions to this:
If Python is at /usr/bin/python, you can change the cron job to use an absolute path: /usr/bin/python /srv/www/live/CronJobs/daily.py
Alternatively you can also add a PATH value to the crontab with PATH=/usr/bin.
Another solution would be to specify an interpreter in the script file, make it executable, and call the script itself in your crontab:
a. Put shebang at the top of your python file: #!/usr/bin/python.
b. Set it to executable: $ chmod +x /srv/www/live/CronJobs/daily.py
c. Put it in crontab: /srv/www/live/CronJobs/daily.py
Adjust the path to the Python interpreter if it's different on your system.
Reference
CRON uses a different TIMEZONE
A very common issue is: cron time settings may is different than your. In particular, the timezone could be not be the same:
# Notice that tasks will be started based on the cron's system
# daemon's notion of time and timezones.
You can run:
* * * * * echo $(date) >> /tmp/test.txt
This should generate a file like:
# cat test.txt
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:02:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:03:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:04:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:05:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:06:01 AM UTC
If you are using a TZ other than UTC, you can try:
timedatectl set-timezone America/Sao_Paulo
replace America/Sao_Paulo according to you settings.
I'm not sure if it is actually necessary, but you can run:
sudo systemctl restart cron.service
After that, cron works as I expected:
# cat test.txt
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:02:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:03:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:04:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:05:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:06:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:07:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:08:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:09:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 09:10:01 AM UTC
Sun 03 Apr 2022 06:11:01 AM -03
Sun 03 Apr 2022 06:12:01 AM -03
Sun 03 Apr 2022 06:13:01 AM -03
Sun 03 Apr 2022 06:14:01 AM -03
Try
service cron start
or
systemctl start cron
In my case I was trying to run cron locally.
I checked status:
service cron status
It showed me:
* cron is not running
Then I simply started the service:
service cron start
Sometimes the command that cron needs to run is in a directory where cron has no access, typically on systems where users' home directories' permissions are 700 and the command is in that directory.
Although answer has been accepted for this question, I will like to add what worked for me.
it's a good idea to quote the URL, if it contains a query it may not work without everything being quoted.
DONT FORGET TO PUT YOUR URL WHICH CONTAINS "?, =, #, %" IN A QUOTE.
Example.
https://paystack.com/indexphp?docs/api/#transaction-charge-authorization&date=today
should be in a quote like so
"https://paystack.com/indexphp?docs/api/#transaction-charge-authorization&date=today"

How can I make chromium run on startup using Raspberry Pi 3?

I have a Raspberry Pi 3 - Model B, with Raspbian jessie operation system.
Im trying to open "chromium" on startup.
i wrote a simple script:
#!/bin/bash
/usr/bin/chromium-browser --noerordialogs --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-infobars --kiosk http://www.google.com
exit 0
I can run the script manually and it works perfect.
I read about a lot of various ways to run this script on startup.
I have tried:
adding this line #reboot path/to/my/script to crontab -e file with no success.
Also i have tried to edit /etc/rc.local file by adding this line:
#!/bin/sh -e
# rc.local
#
# This script is executed at the end of each multiuser runlevel.
# Make sure that the script will "exit 0" on success or any other
# value on error.
#
# In order to enable or disable this script just change the execution
# bits.
#
# By default this script does nothing.
# Print the IP address
_IP=$(hostname -I) || true
if [ "$_IP" ]; then
printf "My IP address is %s\n" "$_IP"
/home/pi/Desktop/script1.sh& <-------- THIS LINE
fi
exit 0
I have checked that the script is executable and rc.local too:
rwxrwxrwx 1 pi pi script1.sh
rwxr-xr-x 1 root root rc.local
I can see script1.sh tesk on my Task Manger (it runs as root) but nothing happen.
The default user is Pi and i log as a Pi user and not as root, maybe this is the problem?
Can someone explain me what is the problom and why i can see the script only in the Task Manager? what should i do ?
TNX!
UPDATE
i have changed the rc.local to be like:
!/bin/sh -e
# rc.local
#
# This script is executed at the end of each multiuser runlevel.
# Make sure that the script will "exit 0" on success or any other
# value on error.
#
# In order to enable or disable this script just change the execution
# bits.
#
# By default this script does nothing.
# Print the IP address
_IP=$(hostname -I) || true
if [ "$_IP" ]; then
printf "My IP address is %s\n" "$_IP"
su - pi -c "/usr/bin/chromium-browser --noerordialogs --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-infobars --kiosk http://www.google.com &"
fi
exit 0
still does not work for me :|
Check out the verified answer on this question...
Running Shell Script after boot on Raspberry PI
Looks like you need to run the script as the user pi.
su - pi -c "/usr/bin/chromium-browser --noerordialogs --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-infobars --kiosk http://www.google.com &"
EDIT: I missed the & at the end of the command.
I did a small hack...
I added this line #lxterminal to the end of this file:
nano .config/lxsession/LXDE-pi/autostart
It will auto-start terminal on boot.
Then I edited $ sudo nano .bashrc file.
At the end of the file, I added my path to my script.
./home/pi/Desktop/script.sh
It means that:
The terminal will open every time you boot your Raspberry Pi (first command).
Every time that terminal runs, my script will run also (second command)
It does work for me.
TNX for the help :)
Adding the shell script path directly to ~/.config/lxsession/LXDE-pi/autostart (not to ~/.bashrc) works better.
Namely it does not execute the command every terminal session (including ssh).
Try this in the autostart file instead:
#sh /home/pi/Desktop/script.sh &

Problems with Raspian autostart via /etc/init.d

(Sorry for bad English, I'm German)
I'm trying (without success) to make my own program start automatically after booting (on a raspberry with raspian).
This is my script: (Note: You have to run this program with root privileges) (Note#2: There must be an empty file called "/home/testLog.txt" with write privileges for every user):
rm /etc/init.d/RMStart
echo "
#! /bin/sh
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: bla1
# Required-Start:
# Required-Stop:
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Short-Description: bla2
# Description: bla3
### END INIT INFO
#Switch case for the first parameter
case \"\$1\" in
start)
echo \"Start\" >> /home/testLog.txt
echo runlevel >> /home/testLog.txt
;;
stop)
echo \"Stop\" >> /home/testLog.txt
echo runlevel >> /home/testLog.txt
;;
restart)
echo \"Restart\" >> /home/testLog.txt
echo runlevel >> /home/testLog.txt
;;
*)
echo \"something else\" >> /home/testLog.txt
;;
esac
exit 0
" >> /etc/init.d/RMStart
chmod +x /etc/init.d/RMStart
update-rc.d RMStart remove #Remove older versions of this program ... in theory
update-rc.d RMStart defaults #Install new version of this program ... in theory
I've rebooted the raspberry, but the file /home/testLog.txt is still empty.
However, if I run the command: "/etc/init.d/RMStart" or "/etc/init.d/RMStart start" there is a new entry in /home/testLog.txt.
I would be thankful if anyone knows why the file /home/testLog.txt is still empty and how I could fix that.
Update:
I've tried a new installation script:
#RMS install script
chmod +x botComp.sh
rm /home/pi/RMS
pkill RMS
./botComp.sh
cp RMS /home/pi
chmod +x /home/pi/RMS
rm /etc/init.d/startRMS
sudo echo "#!/bin/sh
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: fqew
# Required-Start:
# Required-Stop:
# Default-Start: 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Short-Description: sfwef
# Description: gfewf
### END INIT INFO
# Actions
case \"\$1\" in
start)
# START
su pi sh -c \" /home/pi/RMS \"
;;
stop)
# STOP
;;
restart)
# RESTART
;;
esac
exit 0 " >> /etc/init.d/startRMS
chmod +x /etc/init.d/startRMS
update-rc.d startRMS remove
update-rc.d startRMS defaults
The only difference I can see is the name of the script (/etc/init.d/startRMS instead of /etc/init.d/RMStart).
The script works, RMS is running.
It's not really a problem, but the script outputs:
insserv: script RMStart: service F already provided!
insserv: script RMStart: service F already provided!
I've added the line system("runlevel >> /home/pi/runlevelLog.txt"); In the program (RMS) but the content of /home/pi/runlevelLog.txt is: "unknown".
Does RMS start at runlevel 3? How I can I verify this? (I think runlevel 3 is ideal, because RMS needs Network Connection.) Thank you for your help.
is /etc/init.d/RMStart definitely being executed on reboot? use ls -lu to check the last time the file was accessed, wait a minute before rebooting, and repeat the command once you're back up. If the access time hasn't moved on then your script isn't being run which would explain the empty file as your script looks Ok.
You should also double check that update-rc.d has created symbolic links to your script in the appropriate run level directives e.g. does /etc/rc2.d/RMStart exist?
Another sanity check would be running your script using the symbolic links in the above directory rather than from /etc/init.d e.g. does /etc/rc2.d/RMStart
generate output in /home/testLog.txt?
Let me know what you find and we'll take it from there.
EDIT: attempting to replicate..
Well I managed to find my PI; the good news is that neither of us are going mad because it worked perfectly first time as we both believed it should.
I took a copy of your file, and I wrote a quick script (x) to check the exit codes from update-rc.d just to make 100% sure it wasn't complaining about anything.
Hopefully you can follow what I did in the screen shot above - I replicated the steps you followed almost exactly with a bit of extra checking along the way. The script certainly works as designed when called directly.
I then rebooted immediately and checked testLog.txt as soon soon as the system was up. You can see two entries in the file which is expected behaviour as init would have run /etc/rc6.d/K01RMStart as the system went down for reboot, and /etc/rc5.d/S01RMStart as it came up again.
Unfortunately this doesn't help you much.....
The only significant differnce between our tests was that I ran everything as root rather than using sudo. This shouldn't make a difference but the next logical thing for you to try is probably copying my test exactly and seeing if it works for you?
Not that this should be at all significant but I'm running Raspbian 8 (kernel 4.1.13+).
EDIT2: awesome... great stuff. I'd still like to know what the problem was but the main thing in that it's working.
System V based distributions will usually start in either level 3 or level 5, the difference being that level 5 will start the GUI whereas level 3 will start in text mode, their default runlevel is controlled by a line in /etc/inittab.
Debian(Raspian) distros are a bit different - (https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ch-opersys.html#s-sysvinit). They make no distinction between run levels 2-5 and leave it up the user to configure them to suit their requirements by adding services using the mechanism that's been causing us pain for the last 24 hours. They always start in level 5 unless a "init=" kernel boot parameter has been set, which you can do either at boot time or with a tool like bum or raspi-config.
The command runlevel will tell you the current level on raspian.
You can change the runlevel on the fly with telinit new_runlevel if you need to, but whatever you do, don't set the default runlevel to 0 :-)

Puppet init script doesn't create the pid file?

CentOS release 5.4 (Final)
puppet-server-2.7.19-1.el5 is installed from the puppetlabs repo.
puppetmaster is started successfull, but it doesn't create the pid file. It is the reason for [ FAILED ] message when stopping:
/etc/init.d/puppetmaster stop
Stopping puppetmaster: [FAILED]
The init script: http://fpaste.org/nsfI/
The /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions library: http://fpaste.org/ox5Q/
And this is what I get when running in the debug mode: http://fpaste.org/DkoS/
I know the way to echo the pid to a file manually after starting, but why doesn't daemon function's --pidfile work?
daemon $PUPPETMASTER $PUPPETMASTER_OPTS --masterport=${PUPPETMASTER_PORTS[$i]} --pidfile=/var/run/puppet/puppetmaster.${PUPPETMASTER_PORTS[$i]}.pid
Sure, Puppet master is running as puppet user:
ps -ef | grep [p]uppet
puppet 23418 1 0 18:13 ? 00:00:00 /usr/bin/ruby /usr/sbin/puppetmasterd
and the owner of /var/run/puppet/ folder is puppet:
# ls -ld /var/run/puppet/
drwxr-xr-x 2 puppet puppet 4096 Sep 17 18:46 /var/run/puppet/
It is up to the controlled program (in this case puppetmasterd), not the daemon() function, to create the pidfile; daemon() relies on this.
Confirm where puppetmasterd creates its pidfile (it could be /var/run/puppet.pid, /var/lib/puppet/run/master.pid, etc.) To find out, inspect the contents of puppetmasterd (if a script), or kill puppetmasterd then strace -f puppetmasterd 2>&1 | grep '\.pid'.
Modify the value of pidfile in your /etc/init.d/puppetmaster accordingly.
So, it looks to me like there could be a couple of possibilities here:
If you are trying to use the --pidfile option of the daemon command I believe you have a syntax problem.
Red Hat's daemon command has the following (unhelpful) signature: Usage: daemon [+/-nicelevel] {program}. What isn't altogether clear is that anything that you include after the program location is treated as an option passed to the program, not to the daemon function call.
So, in your case you are passing the --pidfile argument to $PUPPETMASTER itself as opposed to daemon(). You could remedy this by using the following: daemon --pidfile=/var/run/puppet/puppetmaster.${PUPPETMASTER_PORTS[$i]}.pid $PUPPETMASTER $PUPPETMASTER_OPTS --masterport=${PUPPETMASTER_PORTS[$i]}
The second option here is that $PUPPETMASTER (or rather, the program behind it) might daemonize itself, and if so, could be responsible for creating its own .pid file. The process management tool Circus works in this way. It's probably an option in a configuration file or for the program representing by $PUPPETMASTER.
I'm not a Puppet user, so I won't be able to help you with the specifics here. But I would look into the Puppet labs documentation to find out more about this option.
It is important to note if $PUPPETMASTER is daemonizing itself, then the --pidfile argument being passed to daemon() will have no effect.
Good hunting!

How to code elasticsearch status checks in ruby with Chef?

I want to accomplish two things:
1) clean out any pointless pid files (if elasticsearch is not running) and then start it, and
2) check that ES has started up before proceeding
Now between what Chef offers out-of-box and what Ruby allows, I can only figure out a pseudo-code like syntax for making it happen but its not going to run so I need some help/advice writing the real thing.
Pseudo-Code For (1):
bash "start it up" do
user "root"
only_if { # pretty sure this syntax is all incorrect, any ideas to make it happen?
(sudo service elasticsearch status).match(/^elasticsearch not running/)
}
code <<-EOS
sudo rm -rf /usr/local/var/run/elasticsearch/*.pid
sudo service elasticsearch restart
EOS
end
Pseudo-Code For (2):
bash "wait for it to start up" do
user "root"
only_if { # pretty sure this syntax is all incorrect, any ideas to make it happen?
(sudo service elasticsearch status).match(/^elasticsearch running with PID/)
}
retries 20
retry_delay 5
code <<-EOS
echo "I can now go on with my life..."
EOS
end
If you wish to ensure a certain particular status before continuing, insert this in a recipe (this is an example and not tested):
service "elasticsearch" do
action [ :enable, :start ]
status_command "/usr/sbin/service elasticsearch status | grep 'running with PID'"
end
It's the job of the init script's start command to wait for the service to be actually started.
Chef docs says:
There is no reason to use the execute resource to control a service because the service resource exposes the start_command attribute directly, which gives a recipe full control over the command issued in a much cleaner, more direct manner.

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