How to make a jar file run on startup & and when you log out?

Here's a easy way to do that using SysVInit. Instructions:

  1. Create the start and the stop script of your application. Put it on some directory, in our example is:

    • Start Script: /usr/local/bin/myapp-start.sh
    • Stop Script: /usr/local/bin/myapp-stop.sh

    Each one will provide the instructions to run/stop the app. For instance the myapp-start.sh content can be as simple as the following:

    #!/bin/bash
    
    java -jar myapp.jar 
    

    For the stop script it can be something like this:

    #!/bin/bash
    # Grabs and kill a process from the pidlist that has the word myapp
    
    pid=`ps aux | grep myapp | awk '{print $2}'`
    kill -9 $pid
    
  2. Create the following script (myscript) and put it on /etc/init.d.

    /etc/init.d/myscript content:

    #!/bin/bash
    # MyApp
    #
    # description: bla bla
    
    case $1 in
        start)
            /bin/bash /usr/local/bin/myapp-start.sh
        ;;
        stop)
            /bin/bash /usr/local/bin/myapp-stop.sh
        ;;
        restart)
            /bin/bash /usr/local/bin/myapp-stop.sh
            /bin/bash /usr/local/bin/myapp-start.sh
        ;;
    esac
    exit 0
    
  3. Put the script to start with the system (using SysV). Just run the following command (as root):

    update-rc.d myscript defaults 
    

PS: I know that Upstart is great and bla bla, but I preffer the old SysV init system.


Yes! It is possible. :) Upstart is the way to go to make sure the service stays running. It has five packages, all installed by default:

  • Upstart init daemon and initctl utility
  • upstart-logd provides the logd daemon and job definition file for logd service
  • upstart-compat-sysv provides job definition files for the rc tasks and the reboot, runlevel, shutdown, and telinit tools that provide compatibility with SysVinit
  • startup-tasks provides job definition files for system startup tasks
  • system-services provides job definition files for tty services

The learning is very enjoyable and well worth it. Upstart has a website: http://upstart.ubuntu.com/


3 quick suggestions...

  1. Create a Start script in /etc/rc3.d (multiuser console mode) with corresponding Kill scripts in /etc/rc.0 and /etc/rc6.d to kill your Java program in a controlled way when the system powers down (runevel 0) or reboots (runlevel 6) See An introduction to Runlevels.

    You might be able to start your Java app in runlevel 2 (rc2.d) but, as a crawler, it will need TCP/IP. So make sure your networking service is available/started in your runlevel 2 beforehand. Networking is definitely up in runlevel 3.

    /etc/init.d contains all the actual start/kill scripts. /etc/rcN.d directories just contain links to them, prefixed with S or K to start or kill them respectively, per runlevel N.

  2. A process run by crond should persist between logouts. Maybe add it to your crontab.

  3. A process run with nohup should also persist. See nohup: run a command even after you logout.

    $ nohup java -jar myapp.jar &
    

    By default, myapp.jar's standard output will go to a file named ./nohup.out, or $HOME/nohup.out if the former isn't writeable.