I have a bash script that I've set up as a monit service. The script ends with a long-running call to tail
that pipes its output to nc
to be sent to an external server.
The issue I'm having is that when I stop the service using monit, the process for the bash script dies, but the process for the tail
call made by that script persists. I've showed an example of this behavior below.
$ sudo monit start service
$ ps aux | grep -E 'service|tail'
root 26215 0.0 0.0 17876 464 ? S 18:31 0:00 /bin/bash -x /path/to/service.sh &>/var/log/service.log
root 26216 0.0 0.0 4344 352 ? S 18:31 0:00 tail -q -n 0 -f /var/log/app.log /var/log/db.log /var/log/mail.log
root 26217 0.0 0.1 20736 1060 ? S 18:31 0:00 nc server.foo.com 1234
$ sudo cat /var/run/service.pid
26215
$ sudo monit stop service
$ ps aux | grep -E 'service|tail'
root 26216 0.0 0.0 4344 352 ? S 18:31 0:00 tail -q -n 0 -f /var/log/app.log /var/log/db.log /var/log/mail.log
root 26217 0.0 0.1 20736 1060 ? S 18:31 0:00 nc server.foo.com 1234
I've tried making the tail
call in a few different ways:
1) in the foreground, outputting the bash script PID to the PID file
echo "$$" > $PID_FILE
tail -q -n 0 -f $args | nc server.foo.com 1234
2) in the background without using a subshell, outputting what should be the last backgrounded process PID to the PID file
{ tail -q -n 0 -f $args | nc server.foo.com 1234; } &
echo "$!" > $PID_FILE
3) in the background using a subshell, outputting what should be the subshell PID to the PID file
( echo $BASHPID > $PID_FILE; tail -q -n 0 -f $args | nc server.foo.com 1234 ) &
Oddly, all these approaches appear to result in the behavior shown above: the bash script PID is always used, the bash script process terminates when monit stops the service, the tail
process does not.
I want to know why this happens and how to kill off any processes invoked by the bash script when the associated service is terminated by monit.