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I have a bash script that I am calling from a build step in Jenkins. Within this bash script is a nohup command for calling a different script in the background, such as:

#!/bin/bash
nohup otherScript.sh &

After the build step completes I go to the path where the nohup.out should have been created, but there is nothing there. Any ideas on what is going on?

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    By using Jenkins for running a command in the background you are defeating its purpose, which is to monitor your scripts as they run.
    – Gonen
    Jun 4, 2013 at 21:19

2 Answers 2

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You should make sure that the output goes into your build's workspace. This will avoid permission problems with other directories.

nohup otherScript.sh > $WORKSPACE/scriptOutput.txt 2>&1 &
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  • Is the final & not unwanted? It makes the script continue with succes even on an error case... ?
    – Sandburg
    Aug 1, 2018 at 7:34
  • Maybe, but the original question has the & so I included it in my answer. Aug 3, 2018 at 5:15
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Quoting from man nohup:

If standard input is a terminal, redirect it from /dev/null. If standard output is a terminal, append output to nohup.out if possible, $HOME/nohup.out otherwise. If standard error is a terminal, redirect it to standard output. To save output to FILE, use nohup COMMAND > FILE.

Running the command from Jenkins probably means that STDOUT is not a terminal, thus nohup.out is not created. As gareth_bowles already suggested, you should redirect the output to a file with a defined path:

nohup script.sh >/path/to/output.log 2>&1 &

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