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Eval to variable failing (w/Crontab)

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-11 16:42 出处:网络
Here\'s a snippet of a bash script I\'m writing to log CPU loads: #!/bin/bash # ... irrelevant nonsense ...

Here's a snippet of a bash script I'm writing to log CPU loads:

#!/bin/bash
# ... irrelevant nonsense ...
cmd1="/usr/bin/mpstat -P ALL | egrep '(AM|PM)([[:space:]]+)(0)' | tr -s ' ' | cut -d' ' -f4"
ldsys="$(echo $cmd1 | /bin/sh)"
# ... i开发者_C百科rrelevant nonsense ...

$ldsys is set properly when the script is executed conventionally from the console. It's golden. Here's the issue: when executed with crontab, $ldsys is empty.

I've been trying millions of things for the last three hours to try to get this thing work... but I can't find anything. Does anyone have any ideas?


Notes:

  • /usr/bin/mpstat can be executed by cron. I tested by adding a bogus task to fire every minute: /usr/bin/mpstat -P ALL >> somefile and checking the output. It works.

  • egrep, tr, and cut all function fine under cron.

  • I'm thinking it really has to do with the eval assignment convention... but I don't know why that would be an issue considering it's a relatively-fundamental construct... After trying Adam's suggestion, I now have no idea what to think...

Edit: stripped out eval usage... still no dice.


Your problem is coming from mpstat. When it's run from the command prompt, it outputs the time with AM/PM. It doesn't when it's run by cron. As ennuikiller suggested, it's probably an environment problem. On my system echo $LANG gives "en_US.UTF-8" at the command prompt, but nothing when run in cron. This or some other environment variable is affecting the way mpstat outputs times so when you grep for "(AM|PM)" it doesn't find it.

By the way, why don't you just do:

ldsys=$(/usr/bin/mpstat ... )

without the assignment to "cmd1", the eval, the echo and the piping to sh?


You are encountering one of the two following issues:

This is perhaps our number one complaint with cron. When you login to Unix, startup scripts setup your environment. You can see your environment with the commands "printenv" or "env". On the other hand, cron sets up only a sparse environment 

Normally the output of any program is sent to STDOUT (standard out) and usually winds up on someone's display screen. For jobs started by cron, STDOUT will be directed to the local mail subsystem, which means any output generated by a cron job will be mailed to the user owning the job


Have you tried eliminating the eval?

Instead of

ldsys=`eval $cmd1`

Try

ldsys=`echo "$cmd1" | /bin/sh`

or

ldsys="$(echo $cmd1 | /bin/sh)"
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