2

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
2
  • Ok. In your tests to get VAL1 and VAL2, you are sending the output of your 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. Jun 18, 2014 at 15:59
  • Perhaps Foo needs to monitor for SIGCHLD to notice when one of its children dies...
    – twalberg
    Jun 18, 2014 at 16:10

2 Answers 2

2

So, one thing about your tests is that you're pushing the output to /dev/null, which means that VAL1 and VAL2 will always be empty.

Secondly, you don't need the elif. You have two basic conditions. Either things are running, or they are not. If anything is not running, send an email. You could do some additional testing to determine whether it's PROCESS TEST1 or PROCESS TEST2 that died, but that wouldn't strictly be necessary.

Here's how I might write a script to do the same thing.

#!/usr/bin/env bash

#Check if process is running
PID1=$(/usr/ucb/ps aux | grep "[P]ROCESS TEST1" | awk '{print $2}')
PID2=$(/usr/ucb/ps aux | grep "[P]ROCESS TEST2" | awk '{print $2}')

err=0

if [ "x$PID1" == "x" ]; then
        # PROCESS TEST1 died
        err=$(( err + 1 ))
else
        echo "$(date) - PROCESS TEST1 $VAL2 is Running" >> /var/tmp/Log.txt;
fi

if [ "x$PID2" == "x" ]; then
        # PROCESS TEST2 died
        err=$(( err + 2 ))
else
        echo "$(date) - PROCESS TEST2  is Running" >> /var/tmp/Log.txt;
fi

if (( $err > 0 )); then
        # identify which PROCESS TEST had the problem.
        if $(( err == 1 )); then
                condition="PROCESS TEST1 is down"
        elif (( $err == 2 )); then
                condition="PROCESS TEST2 is down"
        else
                condition="PROCESS TEST1 and PROCESS TEST2 are down"
        fi

        # let's send an email to get eyes on the issue, but we will restart the process after
        # we send the email.
        SUBJ="Process Error Detected"
        FROM="Server"
        TO="[email protected]"
        (
        cat <<-EOT
        To : ${TO}
        From : ${FROM}
        Subject : ${SUBJ}

        $condition at $(date) please login to the server to check that the processes were restarted successfully.

        EOT
        ) | sendmail -v ${TO}

        # we reached an error condition, and we sent mail
        # now let's restart the svc.
        /usr/sbin/svcadm restart Foo
fi
3
  • Thanks for the updated code. I do not write code that often and will make the corrections tomorrow and test it.I do indent my code once i'm done writing it sorry for that.
    – JA1
    Jun 18, 2014 at 17:06
  • no worries. just wanted to help, but thought an example would be more constructive. Jun 18, 2014 at 21:15
  • This is what I got when I tried to run the script Line 47: syntax error: unexpected end of file
    – JA1
    Jun 19, 2014 at 15:32
0

elseif ? do you mean elif ?

also you thought about using functions and putting the sendmail part within a function that gets called out from within the if statement?

1
  • not just else v elif, but the order. if, elif, else, fi, not if, else, elif, fi. And elif needs a test. you have no test. And indent code for crying out loud. Jun 18, 2014 at 15:54

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