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So I've run into a bit of an issue. My workplace uses environmental variables on it's machines and we've recently switched our dev / prod servers to unix-based solutions (RHEL 6) and we're trying to get some of our old programs to run with a cron. The envir variables are running on the box itself (Example: Server1=dev-server.intranet.net or something along those lines) but we're running into issues where a cron is in place.

Example.

java -jar MyProgram.jar -- Works fine

MyProg.sh - Works fine

JAVA_HOME=/usr/data/java/current
PATH=$JAVA_HOME/bin

export JAVA_HOME
export PATH

java -jar /usr/data/apps/MyProg/MyProg.jar

When calling MyProg.sh from a cron, it doesn't work, as it can't see the envir variables at all.

Can someone offer some insight to how to make this work with a cron?

Thanks.

3
  • This is not really a programming question. It would be more appropriate on superuser.com
    – Stephen C
    Sep 5, 2012 at 14:20
  • Your diagnostic looks incorrect. If the variables are defined and exported in MyProg.sh then they are visible to the java process you started, or something in how the script itself is run is severely fishy. Does it have a valid shebang line?
    – tripleee
    Sep 5, 2012 at 14:23
  • It does indeed have the shabang, I just accidentally omitted it in my copy paste. Our linux sysadmin has been going at this for a little bit and he's been tearing his hair out.
    – A_Elric
    Sep 5, 2012 at 14:36

3 Answers 3

1

JAVA_HOME and PATH doesn't need to be set

Can you try

/usr/data/java/current/java -jar /usr/data/apps/MyProg/MyProg.jar
16
  • 1
    Giving this a shot now, I'll let you know if it works when I see the log after the cron runs at 10:40
    – A_Elric
    Sep 5, 2012 at 14:38
  • "xception in thread "main" com.mysql.jdbc.exceptions.jdbc4.CommunicationsException: Communications link failure The last packet sent successfully to the server was 0 milliseconds ago. The driver has not received any packets from the server." This is what happens when it doesn't find my envir variable.
    – A_Elric
    Sep 5, 2012 at 14:47
  • Which environment variable do you believe controls that? Are you sure the cron process is being run as the same user? Do you see any errors in the server side logs? Sep 5, 2012 at 14:49
  • The exception I posted was from the log the cron generated. The cron is also being run from root I believe. The environmental variable is something like "COMPANY_SQL_SERVER = DEV_SQL_SERVER1" And then it pulls that from a lib included in the program itself. If that variable isn't set I end up with jdbc://null/rest-of-string so it just fails out (which is what I want). However when I simply run the shell script it works out just fine.
    – A_Elric
    Sep 5, 2012 at 14:53
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    It appears to be running my program as root, which doesn't have any env vars set for it at all!
    – A_Elric
    Sep 5, 2012 at 16:30
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I ended up solving this problem by doing a

source /etc/profile.d/MyVars.sh

which got my environmental variables back in place.

-1

Cron always runs with a mostly empty environment. HOME, LOGNAME, and SHELL are set; and a very limited PATH.

In order to available all environment variable, We need to load ~/.profile file before running given command.

In my case i used below commands.

40 11 * * * . $HOME/.profile; /shellPath/bin/execute-job.sh START 5 >> /home/sampleuser/cron.log 2>&1

execute-job.sh

nohup java -Dlog4j.configuration=file:/shellPath/conf/log4j.properties -cp /shellPath/libs/scheduler-0.1.jar  com.scheduler.Scheduler $1 $2 > /dev/null 2>&1 &
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  • This depends entirely on what's in your .profile, and often on what other shell startup files you have. Unfortunately, many installers and guidelines are focused exclusively on how to set things up in your interactive shell environment, and then often contain instructions for modifying .bashrc and/or .zshrc instead of properly configuring the tool for any shell, inculding the default shell used by cron. So, this is not wrong, but quite incomplete.
    – tripleee
    Jan 1, 2022 at 11:39

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