Hi Jonathan, Earlier I was using *from resource_management import ** now I have added this import statement also from resource_management.libraries.functions.format import format and also given 777 permission till the intended pid file. Still its not working.
Can you please tell me from where can I see the print statements which I provide in status function so that I can debug the function. On Mon, Apr 18, 2016, 18:35 Jonathan Hurley <[email protected]> wrote: > What are your import statements? The "format" function provided by > Ambari's common library has a naming conflict with a default python > function named "format". If you don't import the right one, your > format("...") command will fail silently. Make sure you are importing: > > from resource_management.libraries.functions.format import format > > On Apr 18, 2016, at 4:27 AM, Souvik Sarkhel <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Hi All, > > I have created a custom service for Zookeeper and using Ambari 2.1.0 .In > status function of master.py if its defined in this way: > *def status(self, env):* > * config = Script.get_config()* > * zkDataDir = config['configurations']['zoo']['dataDir']* > * print 'Status of the Zookeeper Master'* > * print ****************************************** > * print zkDataDir* > * dummy_master_pid_file = > format("{zkDataDir}/zookeeper_server.pid")* > * check_process_status(dummy_master_pid_file) * > > Ambari is always showing status of application stopped but when I provide > the constant path of the pid file for example: > > *dummy_master_pid_file = "/usr/share/zookeeper/tmp/zookeeper_server.pid")* > > it starts working perfectly and Ambari is able to correctly show the > status of the application. I need a variable pid file instead of a constant > one. I would to thankful if someone suggest me a way out. > > Thanking you in advance > > -- > Souvik Sarkhel > > >
