Due to some issues I wont elaborate here to not waste time, I made a bash script which will ping google every 10 minutes and if there is a response it will keep the loop running and if not then the PC will restart. After a lot of hurdle I have been able to make the script and also make it start on bootup. However the issue is that i want to see the results on the terminal, meaning I want to keep monitoring it but the terminal does not open on bootup. But it does open if I run it as ./net.sh
.
The script is running on startup, that much I know because I use another script to open an application and it works flawlessly.
My system information
NAME="Linux Mint"
VERSION="18.3 (Sylvia)"
ID=linuxmint
ID_LIKE=ubuntu
PRETTY_NAME="Linux Mint 18.3"
VERSION_ID="18.3"
HOME_URL="http://www.linuxmint.com/"
SUPPORT_URL="http://forums.linuxmint.com/"
BUG_REPORT_URL="http://bugs.launchpad.net/linuxmint/"
VERSION_CODENAME=sylvia
UBUNTU_CODENAME=xenial
The contents of my net.sh bash script are
#! /bin/bash
xfce4-terminal &
sleep 30
while true
do
ping -c1 google.com
if [ $? == 0 ]; then
echo "Ping Sucessful. The Device will Continue Operating"
sleep 600
else
systemctl reboot
fi
done
I have put the scripts in /usr/bin
and inserted the scripts for startup at boot in /etc/rc.local
2
Answers
So I did some further research and with help from reddit I realized that the reason I couldnt get it to show on terminal was because the script was starting on bootup but I needed it to start after user login. So I added the script on startup application (which can be found searching on start menu if thats whats it called). But it was still giving issues so I divided the script in two parts. I put the
net.sh
script on startup and directed that script to open my main script which i namednet_loop.sh
This is how the net.sh script looks
And the net_loop.sh
The results are the results of the net_loop.sh script are open in another terminal.
Note: I used help from this thread
If minute interval is usable why not use "cron" to start your?
$> crontab –e
or
$> sudo crontab –e