Re: How to do stop-start fast?
After a couple of fixes the script started working, but Tomcat still hangs. So I guess netstat can't be used for that. Anyway, I have a simple sleep 3 hack that works perfectly, so this is not an issue... Something like this may work (just a quick hack so there may be typos) --start cut here for script #!/bin/sh ### # restart.sh # restarts tomcat # usage: restart.sh ip port #ip - The ip address (or *) #port - Which tomcat listens on shutdown # # eg: restart.sh '*' 8005 # restart.sh 127.0.0.1 8005 # restart.sh 192.168.0.100 8005 # restart.sh 207.46.230.218 8005 ### ### # Function to check it tomcat is running # I run wacky UNIX flavor so you netstat # may differ from mine # side effect: sets variable IS_RUNNING # to signify tomcat is listening on port ### TC_check() { Q=$ADDRESS.$PORT # Grep wants tcp connection that are Listening on the port/address IS_RUNNING=`netstat -an|egrep '^tcp'|grep LISTEN|grep $Q|wc -l` } ### # First - is there a TOMCAT_HOME # so I can call shutdown? if test $TOMCAT_HOME = ; then echo TOMCAT_HOME not defined! exit 2 fi ### # Now check the incoming args ADDRESS=$1 PORT=$2 if test $ADDRESS = ; then echo In valid arg - no address given! exit 2 fi if test $PORT = ; then echo In valid arg - no port given! exit 2 fi ### # Now for the fun TC_check if [ IS_RUNNING -eq 1 ] ; then echo Its running - let's shutdown $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/shutdown.sh TC_check fi while [ IS_RUNNING -eq 1 ] ; do echo Still running sleep 1 TC_check done echo Now startup ... $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/startup.sh ## # End of script ## Aleksi Kallio wrote: Thanks for your fast reply! The netstat alternative seems reasonable. I'm quite new to Unix (server is running Red Hat Linux, shell is csh) and have problems implementing the script. Getting the netstat listing and grepping it is no problem, but how I can loop in a shell script while netstat -l | grep '8442' returns something ie. socket is alive (8442 is the port number)? You have a few alternatives: 1) Kill the java process and then you can run startup.sh immediatetly 2) Write a wrapper script which calls shutdown.sh, then does one of the following to verify tomcat is shutdown before calling startup.sh a) The process is non-existent b) The port is no taken (use netstat) c) Parse catalina.out for the phrase saying tomcat was shutdown -Tim Aleksi Kallio wrote: I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: How to do stop-start fast?
Saludos , Ignacio J. Ortega -Mensaje original- De: Aleksi Kallio [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Enviado el: 17 de julio de 2002 12:21 Para: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Asunto: How to do stop-start fast? I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: How to do stop-start fast?
The killall is a bit nasty but hey, I'm impatient :) Change the paths of course thies /usr/local/tomcat/bin cat restart.sh #!/bin/sh /usr/local/tomcat/bin/shutdown.sh killall java /usr/local/tomcat/bin/startup.sh sleep 2 /usr/local/apache/bin/apachectl restart -Original Message- From: Ignacio J. Ortega [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, July 18, 2002 2:41 PM To: 'Aleksi Kallio'; '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: RE: How to do stop-start fast? Saludos , Ignacio J. Ortega -Mensaje original- De: Aleksi Kallio [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Enviado el: 17 de julio de 2002 12:21 Para: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Asunto: How to do stop-start fast? I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
How to do stop-start fast?
I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How to do stop-start fast?
You have a few alternatives: 1) Kill the java process and then you can run startup.sh immediatetly 2) Write a wrapper script which calls shutdown.sh, then does one of the following to verify tomcat is shutdown before calling startup.sh a) The process is non-existent b) The port is no taken (use netstat) c) Parse catalina.out for the phrase saying tomcat was shutdown -Tim Aleksi Kallio wrote: I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: How to do stop-start fast?
-Original Message- From: Tim Funk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2002 7:27 AM To: Tomcat Users List Subject: Re: How to do stop-start fast? You have a few alternatives: 1) Kill the java process and then you can run startup.sh immediatetly 2) Write a wrapper script which calls shutdown.sh, then does one of the following to verify tomcat is shutdown before calling startup.sh a) The process is non-existent b) The port is no taken (use netstat) c) Parse catalina.out for the phrase saying tomcat was shutdown -Tim Aleksi Kallio wrote: I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How to do stop-start fast?
Something like this may work (just a quick hack so there may be typos) --start cut here for script #!/bin/sh ### # restart.sh # restarts tomcat # usage: restart.sh ip port #ip - The ip address (or *) #port - Which tomcat listens on shutdown # # eg: restart.sh '*' 8005 # restart.sh 127.0.0.1 8005 # restart.sh 192.168.0.100 8005 # restart.sh 207.46.230.218 8005 ### ### # Function to check it tomcat is running # I run wacky UNIX flavor so you netstat # may differ from mine # side effect: sets variable IS_RUNNING # to signify tomcat is listening on port ### TC_check() { Q=$ADDRESS.$PORT # Grep wants tcp connection that are Listening on the port/address IS_RUNNING=`netstat -an|egrep '^tcp'|grep LISTEN|grep $Q|wc -l` } ### # First - is there a TOMCAT_HOME # so I can call shutdown? if test $TOMCAT_HOME = ; then echo TOMCAT_HOME not defined! exit 2 fi ### # Now check the incoming args ADDRESS=$1 PORT=$2 if test $ADDRESS = ; then echo In valid arg - no address given! exit 2 fi if test $PORT = ; then echo In valid arg - no port given! exit 2 fi ### # Now for the fun TC_check if [ IS_RUNNING -eq 1 ] ; then echo Its running - let's shutdown $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/shutdown.sh TC_check fi while [ IS_RUNNING -eq 1 ] ; do echo Still running sleep 1 TC_check done echo Now startup ... $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/startup.sh ## # End of script ## Aleksi Kallio wrote: Thanks for your fast reply! The netstat alternative seems reasonable. I'm quite new to Unix (server is running Red Hat Linux, shell is csh) and have problems implementing the script. Getting the netstat listing and grepping it is no problem, but how I can loop in a shell script while netstat -l | grep '8442' returns something ie. socket is alive (8442 is the port number)? You have a few alternatives: 1) Kill the java process and then you can run startup.sh immediatetly 2) Write a wrapper script which calls shutdown.sh, then does one of the following to verify tomcat is shutdown before calling startup.sh a) The process is non-existent b) The port is no taken (use netstat) c) Parse catalina.out for the phrase saying tomcat was shutdown -Tim Aleksi Kallio wrote: I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: How to do stop-start fast?
Pretty cool...but wouldn't a sleep 15 work just as well? Though you wouldn't be sure tomcat was really down, I guess. #!/bin/sh shutdown.sh sleep 15 startup.sh John Turner [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Tim Funk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2002 9:29 AM To: Tomcat Users List Cc: Aleksi Kallio Subject: Re: How to do stop-start fast? Something like this may work (just a quick hack so there may be typos) --start cut here for script #!/bin/sh ### # restart.sh # restarts tomcat # usage: restart.sh ip port #ip - The ip address (or *) #port - Which tomcat listens on shutdown # # eg: restart.sh '*' 8005 # restart.sh 127.0.0.1 8005 # restart.sh 192.168.0.100 8005 # restart.sh 207.46.230.218 8005 ### ### # Function to check it tomcat is running # I run wacky UNIX flavor so you netstat # may differ from mine # side effect: sets variable IS_RUNNING # to signify tomcat is listening on port ### TC_check() { Q=$ADDRESS.$PORT # Grep wants tcp connection that are Listening on the port/address IS_RUNNING=`netstat -an|egrep '^tcp'|grep LISTEN|grep $Q|wc -l` } ### # First - is there a TOMCAT_HOME # so I can call shutdown? if test $TOMCAT_HOME = ; then echo TOMCAT_HOME not defined! exit 2 fi ### # Now check the incoming args ADDRESS=$1 PORT=$2 if test $ADDRESS = ; then echo In valid arg - no address given! exit 2 fi if test $PORT = ; then echo In valid arg - no port given! exit 2 fi ### # Now for the fun TC_check if [ IS_RUNNING -eq 1 ] ; then echo Its running - let's shutdown $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/shutdown.sh TC_check fi while [ IS_RUNNING -eq 1 ] ; do echo Still running sleep 1 TC_check done echo Now startup ... $TOMCAT_HOME/bin/startup.sh ## # End of script ## Aleksi Kallio wrote: Thanks for your fast reply! The netstat alternative seems reasonable. I'm quite new to Unix (server is running Red Hat Linux, shell is csh) and have problems implementing the script. Getting the netstat listing and grepping it is no problem, but how I can loop in a shell script while netstat -l | grep '8442' returns something ie. socket is alive (8442 is the port number)? You have a few alternatives: 1) Kill the java process and then you can run startup.sh immediatetly 2) Write a wrapper script which calls shutdown.sh, then does one of the following to verify tomcat is shutdown before calling startup.sh a) The process is non-existent b) The port is no taken (use netstat) c) Parse catalina.out for the phrase saying tomcat was shutdown -Tim Aleksi Kallio wrote: I have a script that stops Tomcat (shutdown.sh), does stuff and then restarts it (startup.sh). Doing stuff doesn't take long enough and Tomcat refuses to restart because the port is still reserved. Removing the restart from script and waiting a few secs after running the script, then restarting manually, works. It is just a bit frustrating. Also if a restart too early, Tomcat fails to start and produces a process that has to be killed by hand and it's also frustrating. How to check if Tomcat is stopped properly? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]