Hi Paul
You are right that is the proper way to do it. I left it as is because I was testing / debugging.
Steve was correct the -n fixed the issue.
I will now go back and only do one ssh.
Thanks
On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 9:17 AM, Root, Paul T <Paul.Root at centurylink.com> wrote:
I have a couple questions. Why are you ssh’ing twice to the machine for the same information. And why are you using 2 different ssh clients? And which ssh is exiting the script? What version of Solaris are you using? What are the versions of the ssh clients? What version of xymon are you using? I’d do: ZFSSTAT=
ssh -q $MACHINE /sbin/zpool status rpoolZFSHEALTH=echo $ZFSSTAT| grep ONLINE | wc -lif [ $ZFSHEALTH -ne 1 ] then COLOR=red MSG="&red $MACHINEDOTS : POOL ISSUE" fi $XYMON $XYMSRV "status $MACHINE.$COLUMN $COLORdate${MSG} $ZFSSTAT " From: Xymon [mailto:xymon-bounces at xymon.com] On Behalf Of Ricardo L. Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2014 9:01 AM To: xymon at xymon.com Subject: [Xymon] Ext script not looping I have this script work is failing on all hosts except the first one. I have narrowed it down to the ssh statement. For some reason the ssh statement causes the script to exit after the first host. Any ideas why the ssh statement would cause the ext script to exit after the first host ? #!/bin/sh export PATH=$PATH:/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin HOSTTAG=zfsmon # What we put in hosts.cfg to trigger this test COLUMN=zfs # Name of the column, often same as tag in hosts.cfg $XYMONHOME/bin/xymongrep $HOSTTAG | while read L do set $L # To get one line of output from xymongrep HOSTIP="$1" MACHINEDOTS="$2" MACHINE=echo $2 | $SED -e's/\./,/g'COLOR=green MSG="&green $MACHINEDOTS : POOL OK " #... do the test, perhaps modify COLOR and MSG typeset ZFSSTAT= ZFSHEALTH=/usr/local/bin/ssh $MACHINE "/sbin/zpool get health rpool" | grep ONLINE | wc -lif [ $ZFSHEALTH -ne 1 ] then COLOR=red MSG="&red $MACHINEDOTS : POOL ISSUE" fi ZFSSTAT=ssh -q $MACHINE /sbin/zpool status rpool$XYMON $XYMSRV "status $MACHINE.$COLUMN $COLORdate${MSG} $ZFSSTAT " Done