Hi,
it seems there is no difference in "systemctl status crond"
:(
El 22/11/2019 a las 13:00, centos-request@centos.orgmailto:centos-request@centos.org escribió:
Message: 3 Date: Thu, 21 Nov 2019 14:41:25 +0100 From: Leon Fauster leonfauster@googlemail.commailto:leonfauster@googlemail.com To: centos@centos.orgmailto:centos@centos.org Subject: Re: [CentOS] Issue with "ExecStartPost" attribute in systemd daemon faile Message-ID: b58a12c2-5e5c-f7ce-d69d-d464538f1972@gmail.commailto:b58a12c2-5e5c-f7ce-d69d-d464538f1972@gmail.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
Am 21.11.19 um 14:28 schrieb Gesti? Servidors:
Hello,
I'm trying to configure a daemon (I'm doing tests with "crond" daemon) to send me an email after daemon restart. My "crond.service" file is: # /etc/systemd/system/crond.service [Unit] Description=Command Scheduler After=auditd.service systemd-user-sessions.service time-sync.target #OnFailure=crond-notify-email@%i.service
[Service] EnvironmentFile=/etc/sysconfig/crond ExecStart=/usr/sbin/crond -n $CRONDARGS ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID KillMode=process Restart=on-failure RestartSec=10s ExecStartPost=/bin/sh -c "/etc/systemd/system/test.sh"
[Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target My "test.sh" is very simple: #!/bin/sh echo "CROND is restarting" | /usr/bin/mailx -s "crond failure notification" myemailaddress@mydomain
As you can see, I have added lines "Restart=on-failure", "RestartSec=10s" and " ExecStartPost=/bin/sh -c "/etc/systemd/system/test.sh"" to the original crond.service daemon file. Then, I run "systemctl daemon-reconfigure" and, from one console, I run "kill -9 `pidof cron`" for restarting crond daemon. After it, I receive an email... But now, if I run again ""kill -9 `pidof cron`", I don't receive any mail... I have notice that if I run "systemctl daemon-reload" and then kill crond process, mail is sent perfectly... but if I don't run "systemctl daemon-reload", mail is sent ONLY first time...
Why?
What is "status" showing (systemctl status crond)? For both cases (first/second kill)? Any differences?
-- Leon