Details
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Bug
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Status: Closed
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Minor
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Resolution: Fixed
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Fuseki 2.3.1
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None
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RHEL 6
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Patch
Description
another init script issue.
If FUSEKI_USER is defined, the script attempts to su to that user. Here's the original code snippet.
su - "$FUSEKI_USER" -c " log_daemon_msg "Redirecting Fuseki stderr/stdout to $FUSEKI_LOGS_STDERROUT" exec ${RUN_CMD[*]} &> '$FUSEKI_LOGS_STDERROUT' & disown \$! echo \$! > '$FUSEKI_PID'"
There are several problems with this.
0) log_daemon_msg doesn't exist in this subshell so it throws an error. I filed a separate bug about this.
1) the quoting is problematic, so as written, it doesn't successfully start the software.
I think what happens is that the double-quote before the word "Redirecting" closes out the argument to -c
then the exec happens, but the FUSEKI_LOGS_STDERROROUT is not expanded because it's inside single quotes. So no log, or possibly there's a file sitting somewhere called literally $FUSEKI_LOGS_STDERROROUT - but only if the FUSEKI_USER has permissions to write in the current directory.
Without the log file, I'm not sure why it doesn't start properly, i didn't troubleshoot further down this path.
2) Normally if you "exec" something, the exec'd program replaces the running process. Since the script has the & to background the process, it does that instead. Weird. It's counter-intuitive, though, and unless there's a good reason to have the exec I would suggest removing it. It seems like the subshell + background + disown should provide the functionality that you would normally expect from exec.
I would suggest the following, but I'm not entirely sure of the design goal behind the code snippet so i am not sure it meets the needs.
su "$FUSEKI_USER" -c " echo Redirecting Fuseki stderr/stdout to $FUSEKI_LOGS_STDERROUT ${RUN_CMD[*]} &> $FUSEKI_LOGS_STDERROUT & disown \$! echo \$! > $FUSEKI_PID "