I realize that I can’t reliably count on ps | grep or variants to accurately tell me what PID is started. However I know what I need for interim until this problem is resolved in the next release.
I have a process named Foo that is the parent, TEST1 and TEST2 are the child processes. If TEST1 and/or TEST2 dies off Foo will continue to run and will not respawn TEST1 and/or TEST2 which is needed to function properly. How do I know this because the program to restart TEST1 and/or TEST2 requires Foo to be restarted first.
So when I want to monitor a child process, if failed sendemail that it failed then restart the service and send another email that it is started again. I plan to run the script via CRON every 5 minutes.
The check works independently and so does the sendmail. The problem is when I create a if else statement. When TEST1 or TEST2 dies it still logs that it is running when it is not. Can someone help me on this please.
#!/bin/bash
#Check if process is running
VAL1=`/usr/ucb/ps aux | grep "[P]ROCESS TEST1" >/dev/null`
VAL2=`/usr/ucb/ps aux | grep "[P]ROCESS TEST2" >/dev/null`
if $VAL1 && $VAL2; then
echo "$(date) - $VAL1 & $VAL2 is Running" >> /var/tmp/Log.txt;
else
SUBJ="Process has stopped"
FROM="Server"
TO="[email protected]"
(
cat << !
To : ${TO}
From : ${FROM}
Subject : ${SUBJ}
!
cat << !
The $VAL1 and $VAL2 went down at $(date) please login to the server to restart
!
) | sendmail -v ${TO}
elseif
/usr/sbin/svcadm disable Foo;
wait 10;
/usr/sbin/svcadm enable Foo;
fi
ps | grep
to /dev/null. Meaning VAL1 and VAL2 will always be empty. You also seem to have an errant 'elseif' which doesn't have a test, comes after 'else', and probably shouldn't be there at all, since you want Foo to restart if there's no VAL1 and VAL2.