Hi Doru
You just need to create a script that greps to see if the process is there and not to
start it in the background with &. You then put the script in your crontab. All the
necessary environment variables need to be defined for the context of the script. You can
even just kill and start it at a non critical time of the day. It is not complicated.
The problem of crashing could be due lack of memory. Maybe you can start the process with
more memory.
Cheers,
Orla
On Mar 23, 2010, at 9:27 PM, Tudor Girba wrote:
Hi,
Using hudson for nightly build development images would be great. And I certainly
appreciate anyone that uses the latest and greatest dev image to provide feedback.
However, my problem is that I do not know how to keep hudson alive. It keeps on crashing
on my Ubuntu 8.04 server. I would need some daemontools-like process that spawns it back
after a crash, but I have problems installing that one, too. So, I am a bit stuck :(.
Cheers,
Doru
On 23 Mar 2010, at 21:23, Simon Denier wrote:
On 23 mars 2010, at 20:01, Stéphane Ducasse wrote:
but johan if you use the nightly build you should
complain that there are problems.
Would you use the nightly build of mac os?
Well technically I think there is no difference: the test server performs the same
procedure that we do to load the latest development version.
I think that in the future there will be probably a server to certify and build images
but right now
nightly builds are adventurous.
Stef
There is no 'latest version' image available on
http://www.moosetechnology.org/download I only see 4.0 beta 5 there. Monticello does not
count, I want a ready to run nightly build image. I got that from hudson without any
problems. Now if there is another way to get a nightly build image I would be happy as
well ...
On 23 Mar 2010, at 15:03, Alexandre Bergel wrote:
> Hi Johan,
>
> I am not sure to fully understand.
http://hudson.moosetechnology.org is a server that
regularly runs the tests. If you want to have a read to use image,
thenhttp://www.moosetechnology.org/download is probably a good starting point.
> As Simon said, I recommend to always use the last version for developing.
>
> Cheers,
> Alexandre
>
--
Johan Fabry
jfabry(a)dcc.uchile.cl -
http://dcc.uchile.cl/~jfabry
PLEIAD Lab - Computer Science Department (DCC) - University of Chile
_______________________________________________
Moose-dev mailing list
Moose-dev(a)iam.unibe.ch
https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
_______________________________________________
Moose-dev mailing list
Moose-dev(a)iam.unibe.ch
https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
--
Simon
_______________________________________________
Moose-dev mailing list
Moose-dev(a)iam.unibe.ch
https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
--
www.tudorgirba.com
"In a world where everything is moving ever faster,
one might have better chances to win by moving slower."
_______________________________________________
Moose-dev mailing list
Moose-dev(a)iam.unibe.ch
https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev