A simple tool that can help you test and debug issues with cron scripts.
Using cron to run scripts is a handy way to automate routine tasks. A very common question that comes up is why doesn't a shell script that works fine when I test it from the command prompt work when it runs as a cron job?
I'm batting a thousand on the answer I've given to people asking that question lately. Almost always when this happens it is because the $PATH
used to search for commands in the shell started by cron does not match the $PATH
you have when you run something from the command line. Typically what happens is the script being run by cron can't find the command, so things get 'skipped' and don't work as expected.
If you set up the mail system, you will actually get notifications when errors like this happen along with enough information to help with debugging, but few people do this. A handy alternative is to be able to run a scrip just like it was cron kicking off the job. Sometimes people will use crontab to edit the table of cron jobs to do this, but this is an extra step that you have to remember to back out once things are working and just another chance for a typo to creep into things. You also have to wait what always seems like it MUST be more than a minute for your changes to run.
Out of this was born run-as-cron. This is not a new idea and there are several versions floating around (see the References towards the end). But I wanted something that had better step-by-step instructions and some flexibility that I didn't see in the examples I found after a quick search.
Create a local folder to store the cron environment details in:
$ mkdir ~/.local/share/run-as-cron
Create a tempoary cron job by using crontab -e
and adding the following line to the bottom of crontab:
* * * * * /usr/bin/env > ~/.local/share/run-as-cron/cron-env
Once this successfully runs, you can either delete it or change it so it runs once a day. Running it daily will ensure the configuration information is kept fresh, although the cron environment should not change often (if ever). But to be on the safe side, I went back into crontab -e
and edited the line so that it now runs each time I reboot:
@reboot /usr/bin/env > ~/.local/share/run-as-cron/cron-env
Now go to the directory where you keep your Software or Programs. You can either download the file or, if you have git installed, create a clone:
$ git clone https://github.com/w4jbm/run_as_cron/
On my system, I have these file in the directory ~/Software/run_as_cron
. Now just make sure things are set up to execute and put a symbolic link in a directory on the search path so we can run this from anywhere:
$ chmod +x install.sh
$ ./install.sh
And things should be ready to go!
So if you have a daily script, you should be able to test it and see exactly how it will run as a cron job. That will look something like this:
run-as-cron ~/ShellScripts/daily.sh
One important thing is that commands with white space MUST be contained in quotes. For example, if you want to see what shell is in use, you must type:
run-as-cron 'echo $SHELL'
It would be nice to be able to do this without the quotes (and maybe someone has an idea on how to do that). I tried replacing the echo /bin/bash
command instead of the echo
command with a $SHELL
argument.
The bottom line on that was that having to use single quotes isn't that painful since this isn't something I use that often. When I am using it, I typically have an editor open and just use the command line history to re-execute the same test command over and over until I get things working.
Once we have the cron environment file saved, we can take a look at what is in it and what some of the implications are. Here is an example:
HOME=/home/username
[email protected]
LOGNAME=username
PATH=/usr/bin:/bin
LANG=en_US.UTF-8
SHELL=/bin/sh
PWD=/home/username
The location of the home directory, user name, and such is fairly straight forward. There are, however, two key things that stand out. First, look at the value of the $SHELL
being used. We can look at this from the command line also:
$ echo $SHELL
/bin/bash
$ run-as-cron 'echo $SHELL'
/bin/sh
$
While cron jobs make use of sh
, the Bourne shell, the command line we typically are working with is using bash
, the Bourne again shell. This is reasonable since things like command line completion and command history are great when we're at the keyboard, but shouldn't be needed by an automated script.
The difference that causes the most headaches is around the $PATH
:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/games:/usr/games:/sbin:/usr/sbin
$ run-as-cron 'echo $PATH'
/usr/bin:/bin
$
You can see that bash
from the command line is looking in a lot more places to find something that matches the command you just typed in than sh
run by cron does.
And that is at the heart of a lot of problems people experience.
Once you have run-as-cron installed, you are on your way to figuring out what is going on. One recent issue I ran into was related to use of sendmail
. When I would run a script from the normal command prompt things worked fine, but when this same command was run as a cron job it would not mail the file.
The where
command is a quick way to find the subdirectory a particular command is located in. I ran the following commands and the problem became clear.
$ which sendmail
/sbin/sendmail
$ run-as-cron 'which sendmail'
which sendmail
/bin/sh: 1: which sendmail: not found
$
On my system, sendmail
is in the /sbin/sendmail
subdirectory--a directory cron does not access. So when I try to run sendmail
as part of a script started by cron, it may fail like this:
$ echo "Subject: sendmail test" | sendmail -v [email protected]
...
_Lots of good stuff here!!!_
...
$ run-as-cron 'echo "Subject: sendmail test" | sendmail -v [email protected]'
/bin/sh: 1: echo "Subject: sendmail test" | sendmail -v [email protected]: not found
$
Since which
told me where to find sendmail
, I know that I need to use /sbin/sendmail
instead of just sendmail
to make things work:
$ run-as-cron 'echo "Subject: sendmail test" | /sbin/sendmail -v [email protected]'
...
_Lots of good stuff here!!!_
...
$
So, as expected, all that was needed to resolve the issue was putting the full path for the command that seemed to 'fail' (or not be executed) when running as a cron job.
NOTE: Another thing I found with sendmail is that if you have things like the recipient list and subject at the first of the file, the first line of the message itself cannot contain a :
. I had a first line that was something like: Directory Contents:
. Things consistently failed until I changed this to Directory Contents...
.
I have seen similar scripts around, but the two sources I used when I decided it was time to put this tool together were Marco's answer out on serverfault.com and Micheal Barton's answer (with edits by Matyas) out on stackexchange.com.
This is simply a compilation of items I've pulled from various public sources and tweaked a bit. I do not believe any of the material used as reference was copyrighted. But if there are any previous copyright claims on anything similar, this particular implementation is an original work and reference to previous works would fall into the category of Fair Use.
This README.md file and the detailed installation instruction are original works by Jim McClanahan W4JBM.
This is released under the unlicense.
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