Task #1128
closedPlease Configure tomcat instance of cotrix.d4science.org to restart automatically
100%
Related issues
      
      Updated by Roberto Cirillo almost 10 years ago
      
    
    - Assignee changed from Roberto Cirillo to _InfraScience Systems Engineer
 
Could you check also if this host is monitored by ganglia or nagios. if it is not, could you add a nagios check?
      
      Updated by Andrea Dell'Amico almost 10 years ago
      
    
    There are no nagios nor ganglia monitoring.
I was told that the service was going to be dismissed as part of the imminent upgrade. If it's not the case, I'll add it to nagios and ganglia. On what ganglia cluster?
      
      Updated by Andrea Dell'Amico almost 10 years ago
      
    
    - Related to Task #1127: Add cotrix.d4science.org to the nagios monitoring added
 
      
      Updated by Roberto Cirillo almost 10 years ago
      
    
    Andrea Dell'Amico wrote:
There are no nagios nor ganglia monitoring.
I was told that the service was going to be dismissed as part of the imminent upgrade. If it's not the case, I'll add it to nagios and ganglia. On what ganglia cluster?
This is a web app running on tomcat. It is not managed by smartgears but I guess it could be added to Smartgears cluster because In the future, I guess, this application could be managed by smartgears
      
      Updated by Andrea Dell'Amico almost 10 years ago
      
    
    - Status changed from New to In Progress
 
      
      Updated by Andrea Dell'Amico almost 10 years ago
      
    
    - % Done changed from 0 to 80
 
I've added an upstart script: /etc/init/cotrix.conf and tested it (the instance was stopped since the last outage, btw).
      
      Updated by Andrea Dell'Amico almost 10 years ago
      
    
    I also removed the /etc/init.d/cotrix script: it didn't set the right username, so it was dangerous.
      
      Updated by Andrea Dell'Amico almost 10 years ago
      
    
    - Status changed from In Progress to Closed
 - % Done changed from 80 to 100
 
cotrix.d4science.org is now part of the smartgears ganglia cluster.