I’ve set a script in my root crontab that is supposed to restart my machine with the reboot
command.
However, I am getting a reboot: command not found
despite the fact that reboot
is in the root user’s path.
$ sudo su $ which reboot /sbin/reboot $ echo $PATH /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/local/go/bin
My script:
#!/bin/bash ping 8.8.8.8 -c 1 > /dev/null 2>&1; exit_code=$? time_stamp=$(date +"%Y%m%d-%H%M") if [ $exit_code -ne 0 ]; then (1>&2 echo "$time_stamp: failed with exit code $exit_code; restarting now") reboot else echo "$time_stamp: ok" fi
root user crontab:
$ sudo crontab -l 58 * * * * /home/pi/github/ping-restart/ping-restart.sh >> /home/pi/github/ping-restart/cron.log 2>&1 $ sudo su 58 * * * * /home/pi/github/ping-restart/ping-restart.sh >> /home/pi/github/ping-restart/cron.log 2>&1
…yes, this is only a temporary workaround while I figure out why the internet keeps dropping.
Advertisement
Answer
cron jobs run with a very basic environment setup; among other things, the default PATH is just /usr/bin:/bin
. It does not use the user’s regular shell setup. There are several ways to solve this:
- Use the full path in the script (i.e.
/sbin/reboot
). - Set PATH in the script before using
reboot
(i.e.PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
). - Set PATH in the crontab before the entry for your script (syntax is the same as in the script).