Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Testing Monitoring Application Post 51418 by izy100 on Wednesday 19th of May 2004 12:51:43 PM
Old 05-19-2004
I guess you are talking about monitoring the monitoring script.

You can log the monitoring process to a flat file with timestamp.
This way, you can check the log to see if the monitoring script is running
 

3 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with extract application logs through shell script in performance testing

Hi Experts, I am new to shell.How to extract logs (Web,APP,Database) using shell in performance testing? Need for webserver logs,app server logs and d/b logs code. Thanks in advance Sree (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sree vasu
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Ip up/down testing

#!/bin/bash ip=$1 if ; then echo "U must enter ip as argument: $0 " exit 1 fi testip=`echo $ip |grep -E "^((||1{2}|2|25)){3}(||1{2}|2|25)$"` if ; then echo "Wrong ip adress" exit 2 fi ping -c 2 $ip 2>&1 >/dev/null if ; then echo "$ip is UP" else echo "$ip is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: aco4u
2 Replies

3. What is on Your Mind?

Self made monitoring application

Hi.. Looking for advice / feedback Work in IT in an operational team, number of years ago, all monitoring was manual, vast checklists for unix checks, checking space, checking application processes, files etc. filling in spreadsheets etc. I took some basic scripting courses in ksh and... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: frustrated1
2 Replies
runsvdir(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       runsvdir(8)

NAME
runsvdir - starts and monitors a collection of runsv(8) processes SYNOPSIS
runsvdir [-P] dir [ log ] DESCRIPTION
dir must be a directory. log is a space holder for a readproctitle log, and must be at least seven characters long or absent. runsvdir starts a runsv(8) process for each subdirectory, or symlink to a directory, in the services directory dir, up to a limit of 1000 subdirectories, and restarts a runsv(8) process if it terminates. runsvdir skips subdirectory names starting with dots. runsv(8) must be in runsvdir's PATH. At least every five seconds runsvdir checks whether the time of last modification, the inode, or the device, of the services directory dir has changed. If so, it re-scans the service directory, and if it sees a new subdirectory, or new symlink to a directory, in dir, it starts a new runsv(8) process; if runsvdir sees a subdirectory being removed that was previously there, it sends the corresponding runsv(8) process a TERM signal, stops monitoring this process, and so does not restart the runsv(8) process if it exits. If the log argument is given to runsvdir, all output to standard error is redirected to this log, which is similar to the daemontools' readproctitle log. To see the most recent error messages, use a process-listing tool such as ps(1). runsvdir writes a dot to the read- proctitle log every 15 minutes so that old error messages expire. OPTIONS
-P use setsid(2) to run each runsv(8) process in a new session and separate process group. SIGNALS
If runsvdir receives a TERM signal, it exits with 0 immediately. If runsvdir receives a HUP signal, it sends a TERM signal to each runsv(8) process it is monitoring and then exits with 111. SEE ALSO
sv(8), runsv(8), runsvchdir(8), runit(8), runit-init(8), chpst(8), svlogd(8), utmpset(8), setsid(2) http://smarden.org/runit/ AUTHOR
Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org> runsvdir(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:49 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy