Reputation: 83
I've been trying to learn the syntax of logic statements in bash, how to do if/else, pipes and stuff. I'm trying to build a bash script, but I fail miserably after 3 hours of not getting how this stuff works.
Now I need this little script, I'll try to explain it using a generalized code, or call it whatever you want. Here you go:
while variable THRESHOLD = 10
{
if netstat -anltp contains a line with port 25565
then set variable THRESHOLD to 0 and variable PROCNUM to the process number,
else add 1 to variable THRESHOLD
sleep 5 seconds
}
kill the process No. PROCNUM
restart the script
Basically, what it does is, that once the socket closes, after a few tries, it kills the process which was listening on that port.
I'm pretty sure it's possible, but I can't figure out how to do it properly. Mostly because I don't understand pipes and am not really familiar with grep. Thank you for your help, in advance.
Upvotes: 0
Views: 467
Reputation: 146
#!/bin/bash
# write a little function
function do_error {
echo "$@" 1>&2
exit 1
}
# make the user pass in the path to the executable
if [ "$1" == "" ]; then
do_error "USAGE: `basename $0` <path to your executable>"
fi
if [ ! -e $1 ]; then
do_error "Unable to find executable at $1"
fi
if [ ! -x $1 ]; then
do_error "$1 is not an executable"
fi
PROC="$1"
PROCNAME=`basename $PROC`
# forever
while [ 1 ]; do
# check whether the process is up
proc=`ps -ef | grep $PROCNAME 2>/dev/null`
# if it is not up, start it in the background (unless it's a daemon)
if [ "$proc" == "" ]; then
$PROC &
fi
# reinitialize the threshold
threshold=0
# as long as we haven't tried 10 time, continue trying
while [ threshold -lt 10 ]; do
# run netstat, look for port 25565, and see if the connection is established.
# it would be better to checks to make sure
# that the process we expect is the one that established the connection
output=`netstat -anp | grep 25565 | grep ESTABLISHED 2>/dev/null`
# if netstat found something, then our process was able to establish the connection
if [ "$output" != "" ]; then
threshold = 0
else
# increment the threshold
threshold=$((threshold + 1))
fi
# i would sleep for one second
sleep 1
done
kill -9 $PROCNUM
done
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 63932
Don't want be offensive, but if you can write a "generalized" program all you need is learn th syntax of the while
, if
for bash and read the man pages of the grep
and kill
and so on...
And the pipes
are the same as in your garden. Having two things: tap
and pond
. You can fill your pond with many ways (e.g. with rain). Also, you can open your tap getting water. But if you want fill the pond with the water from a tap, need a pipe. That's all. Syntax:
tap | pond
e.g.
netstat | grep
netstat
grep
that's all magic... :)
About the syntax: You tagged your question as bash
.
So googling for a bash while syntax
will show to you, this Beginners Bash guide
http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_09_02.html
to, and you can read about the if
in the same website.
Simply can't believe than after 3 hours you cannot understand basic while
and if
syntax to write your program with a bash syntax - especially, when you able write an "generalized" program...
is is not to hard (with modifying the 1st example in the above page) to write:
THRESHOLD="0"
while [ $THRESHOLD -lt 10 ]
do
#do the IF here
THRESHOLD=$[$THRESHOLD+1]
done
and so on...
Upvotes: 1