Provided by: shush_1.2.3-4_amd64 

NAME
shush - Run a command and optionally report its output by mail
SYNOPSIS
shush [ -h | -V ]
shush [ -c dir ] [ -S | -s facility ] [ -vfmk ] name [ ID ]
shush [ -c dir ] [ -H to ] [ -R to ] [ -T to ] -C name [ stdout [ stderr ] ]
shush [ -i | -u | -r ] [ -c dir ]
DESCRIPTION
shush runs a command and optionally reports its output by mail. It is a useful wrapper around cron jobs.
By default, shush will not produce any output when running as everything (if anything) is reported by
mail. However, configuration as well as critical errors will be reported on the standard error and
(optionally) syslog. Because interrupting shush has dire consequences including the likely loss of any
output from the command, the following commonly used signals are ignored by shush: SIGHUP, SIGINT,
SIGQUIT and SIGTERM. If one really wants to kill a running instance of shush rather than killing the
running managed command, SIGKILL may be used and shall serve as a reminder of how inappropriate such
action typically is.
For a command to be run using shush, a configuration file name must exist in the configuration directory
($HOME/.shush by default). This file defines how the command should be run as well when to send reports
by mail. For details on available configuration parameters, see the CONFIGURATION section below.
Two additional configuration files may exist: name.stdout and name.stderr (by default). These files are
used to look at the standard output and standard error (respectively) produced by the command. For
details on how to use these, see the COMMAND OUTPUT section below.
When the -C option is specified, shush will only load the configuration, optionally analyze the standard
output and standard error from the specified files and finally produce sample reports if desired. This
may also be used to produce reports if shush failed to properly terminate when running a command. (The
standard output and error from the command are normally found in files located under /tmp.)
shush is able to manage crontab(5) entries based on configurations defined by the user. This may be done
in one of two ways. If a file named "schedule" exists in the configuration directory, then it is read
for scheduling information. Each line should contain a single entry containing three fields separated by
whitespace(s). The fields are (in order) the hostname for which the entry applies or the character "*"
to include all hosts, the configuration name, and finally, the scheduling information in the same format
as is used by the schedule parameter (see below). To specify an ID, use name:ID as the second field. If
there is no file named "schedule", then shush checks the configuration directory for configuration files
and adds them to the current user's crontab(5) file as specified by the included schedule parameter (see
below). Files whose names start with the character "#" or end with the character "~" are ignored.
OPTIONS
-h Display a brief help message.
-V Display the version information. Prefix with -v to display compile time defaults.
-c dir Specify the directory where configurations are stored.
-s facility
Defines the syslog facility to use for logging.
-S Disable syslog logging.
-v Copy information log messages to the standard output.
-f Fast mode: Any configured randomdelay is ignored.
-m Monitor and display the command's standard output and error in real time.
-k Keep the command's output log files instead of deleting them upon completion.
-C Check the configuration without running any command.
-H to Send a sample HTML report to the specified recipient(s).
-R to Send a sample enriched report to the specified recipient(s).
-T to Send a sample text report to the specified recipient(s).
-i Use crontab(1) to install a new crontab(5) file for the current user. The user must not already
have a crontab(5) file.
-u Use crontab(1) to update the current user's crontab(5) file, which must already exist.
-r Remove any entry added by the -u option from the current user's crontab(5).
CONFIGURATION
shush configuration files consist of a main section, report section(s) and parameters. The main section
defines global parameters as well as defaults for reports. Each report section begins with the name of
the report between brackets. Lines beginning with the character "#" are ignored. Parameters should be
specified only once. If specified multiple times, all but the last occurrence will be ignored, unless
noted otherwise. Parameters are defined using the following syntax:
name=value
or:
name@hostname=value
or:
name%ID=value
or finally:
name@hostname%ID=value
The second and fourth formats will be ignored unless shush is running on the specified hostname. The
third and fourth formats allow defining multiple instances of a single configuration file. Such
configuration files require an instance ID to be specified in order to run. Any configuration line using
the third or fourth formats will be ignored if the ID found on that line does not match the instance ID
used to run shush.
The following parameters may appear in the main section:
command
The actual command to run. shush sets two environment variables before running the command:
SHUSH_NAME is set to name, and SHUSH_ID is set to ID.
config This defaults to the full path of the main configuration file. The other two configuration file
names are obtained by appending the ".stdout" and ".stderr" suffixes to the value of this
parameter.
lock If set, this parameter instructs shush to obtain a lock file before running the command, and
defines the actions to take in case the lockfile is held by another process. The format is a
comma separated list of actions. Valid actions are: a time duration (during which shush should
simply wait and keep trying to obtain the lockfile), the string "abort" (indicating that shush
should terminate immediately if the lockfile already exists), the string "ignore" (indicating that
shush should ignore an existing lockfile), the string "loop" (to mark where to start again from
when all actions have been executed) and the string "notify=" followed by mail addresses to which
a notification mail should be sent. Actions are executed in the order they are provided, and
shush will wait forever trying to obtain the lockfile once all the actions have been executed,
unless the string "loop" is one of defined actions. Time durations may be specified in units of
w(eeks), d(ays), h(ours), m(inutes) or s(econds). If no unit is specified, it is assumed to be
minutes.
lockfile
By default, shush will use a file located in the same directory as the configuration file, and
named after the configuration and host names. An alternate filename may be specified using this
parameter.
lockmsg
If set, this string will be used as subject for lock notification(s) mail messages. The default
is "[%u@%h] **PENDING** %N [%t]". See the MAIL SUBJECT section for details on the format.
path shush does not modify the environment, except to set the PATH variable if the path parameter is
set.
randomdelay
If this parameter is set, shush will wait up to the specified amount of time before starting the
command unless invoked with the -f. Valid time units are: s(econds), m(inutes), h(ours), d(ays),
w(eeks). If no unit is specified, it is assumed to be minutes.
schedule
This defines when to run this command as a cron job, in a crontab(5) compatible format. Multiple
entries may be specified using the character ";" as separator. Entries prefixed by the character
"#" will be skipped. This parameter is not directly used by shush to run the command, but used by
the -i and -u options.
sendmail
This may be used to override the command used to send mail.
shell By default, the Bourne shell sh(1) is used to run the command, allowing any shell syntax to be
used. An alternate shell may be defined using this parameter.
statedir
This defines the directory where the status of shush is saved and defaults to the ".state"
directory under where the configuration is located. An error is generated if the directory does
not exist unless this option was not set. Setting this option to an empty string will prevent
shush from saving its status. shlast(1) uses these state files to report on running instances of
shush as well as previous runs.
syslog This parameter is only used by the -i and -u options and has no other effect on shush. It allows
overriding the default syslog facility used for logging and defined at compile time. If left
blank, this suppresses the use of syslog.
timeout
This parameter allows one to control how long the command may run. It should be a comma separated
list of actions. Valid actions are: a time duration (during which shush should simply wait for
the command to terminate), a signal (either "SIGNAME" or "-SIGNUMBER") that should be sent to the
command's process group, a signal (either "=SIGNAME" or "=SIGNUMBER") that should be sent to the
shell used to spawn the command, the string "loop" (to mark where to start again from when all
actions have been executed) and the string "notify=" followed by mail addresses to which a
notification mail should be sent. Actions are executed in the order they are provided, and shush
will wait forever if the command is still running once all the actions have been executed unless
the string "loop" is one of defined actions. Time durations may be specified in units of w(eeks),
d(ays), h(ours), m(inutes) or s(econds). If no unit is specified, it is assumed to be minutes.
timeoutmsg
If set, this string will be used as subject for timeout notification(s) mail messages. The
default is "[%u@%h] **TIMEOUT** %N [%t]". See the MAIL SUBJECT section for details on the format.
The following parameters may appear anywhere in the configuration. If specified in the main section,
they define defaults settings that will apply to any report for which the same parameter has not been
defined.
to, cc, bcc
Where to send the mail report.
subject
Subject of the mail report. See the MAIL SUBJECT section for details on the format.
header Additional mail header(s). Note that this parameter may be repeated to specify multiple headers.
However, only headers from the report (if specified) or from the main section will be used for a
given report.
hostprefix
By default, specified subjects are prefixed with the host name between brackets. This parameter
allows one to customize this prefix. A positive integer indicates how many components of the
fully qualified hostname should be shown. A negative integer indicates how many trailing
components of the fully qualified hostname should be trimmed. The integer zero indicates that the
prefix should be omitted. This parameter is ignored if the "subject" contains any "%" character.
userprefix
By default, specified subjects are prefixed with the username between brackets. This parameter
allows one to disable this prefix. Any non zero value indicates that the username should be shown
while zero causes the prefix to be omitted. This parameter is ignored if the "subject" contains
any "%" character.
output (previously "stderr")
This defines how the command's standard output and standard error are captured and reported to the
user: "errfirst", "mixed", "outfirst". When using "mixed", the name.stderr configuration file is
ignored. When using "errfirst" or "outfirst", individual reports may use one of the following two
additional options "outonly" and "erronly".
format Mail messages sending the output of the command may be sent in three different formats: "text"
(the default), "enriched" text or "html".
sizelimit
By default, the entire output of the command is sent in mail reports. This parameter may be used
to limit the size of the output included in a report. Note that the total size of mail sent will
be greater as this limit has no effect upon mail headers. The size can be specified in units of
m, k, b, c (MB, KB, Bytes). If no unit is specified, it is assumed to be KB. A limit of zero
indicates that the output should not be truncated.
if A report is only sent if no if condition is specified or if the specified if condition is true.
The condition syntax allows for the usual logical operators ("||", "&&", "!"), comparison
operators ("==", "!=", "<", "<=", ">", ">=") and basic arithmetic operators ("+", "-"). Aside
from counters defined by the configuration (see the COMMAND OUTPUT section below), the following
variables may be used:
$exit If the command terminated normally, this is its exit code. Otherwise, it is negative and
indicates the signal number having caused the command to terminate (e.g. -1 indicates
signal number 1 caused the command to terminate).
$size output size (in bytes), same as "$outsize + $errsize"
$outsize
size (in bytes) of standard output
$errsize
size (in bytes) of standard error
$lines number of lines output
$outlines
number of standard output lines
$errlines
number of standard error lines
$runtime
command run time (in seconds)
$utime user time used by the command
$stime system time used by the command
$tty 1 if shush is run from a terminal (e.g. interactively), 0 otherwise.
MAIL SUBJECTS
The "lockmsg", "timeoutmsg" and "subject" parameters may contain the following tokens which are expanded
as described below:
%% The "%" character
%h The hostname
%<digit>
or "%-<digit>"
A partial hostname: A positive digit indicates how many components of the fully qualified
hostname to keep; a negative digit indicates how many trailing components of the fully
qualified hostname to trim.
%i The instance ID
%n The configuration name
%N The configuration name and instance ID
%r The report name
%t The elapsed time.
%u The username.
%U The userid.
If the "%" character is found in the "subject" parameter, then the "hostprefix" and
"userprefix" parameters are ignored.
COMMAND OUTPUT
After the command terminates, shush will use the contents of the name.stdout and name.stderr files (if
they exist) to look at the output produced by the command.
These files follow a simple format. Each line is composed of a single character (the counter name)
followed by a regular expression.
All counters are initialized to 0 (zero). Each line of output is matched against these regular
expressions until a match is found. If a match is found, the associated counter is incremented by one.
These counters may then be used as part of the main configuration, in an "if" configuration parameter,
allowing the decision to send a mail report to be based on how many times certain regular expressions
have been matched.
Finally, regular expressions may define sub-expressions which will be rendered in bold in mail reports.
Lines starting with the character "#" are considered to be comments and are ignored. By default,
standard regular expressions are used, unless the first line is "#pcre" in which case Perl compatible
regular expressions are used.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
HOME If the -c option is not used, shush will look for configuration files in $HOME/.shush.
SHUSH_SENDMAIL
If defined, this should point to the sendmail(1) binary. This variable overrides the "sendmail"
configuration setting and should be used with care.
TMPDIR Directory where temporary files are created.
EXAMPLE
The following configuration runs "shush -c /etc/shush -u" daily at 9:00, updating the user (root)
crontab:
command=shush -c /etc/shush -u
schedule=0 9 * * *
lock=notify=root root-logs,abort
timeout=5m,loop,notify=root root-logs,15m
stderr=first
format=text
Subject=Crontab Daily Update
[logs]
to=root-logs
[readers]
if=$exit != 0 || $outlines != 1 || $errsize > 0 || U
to=root
format=rich
The associated configuration for standard output is:
Oshush: crontab updated\.$
U^.+$
and for standard error:
U^(.+)$
A lock will be set while running the command, and mail sent to "root" and "root-logs" if the lock is held
by another process when shush starts, in which case shush will abort. A mail will also be sent to "root"
and "root-logs" if "shush -c /etc/shush -u" runs for more than 5 minutes, and for every 15 minutes
following the first 5 minutes.
Upon completion, the output will always be sent to "root-logs". Additionally, the output will be sent to
"root" if the condition "$exit != 0 || $outlines != 1 || $errsize > 0 || U" is true. For this condition
to be true, one of the following must be true: the exit code is non zero, the command standard output was
not a single line, there was output on standard error or finally, the counter "U" is non zero. For the
counter "U" to be non zero, there must be output on standard output other than the line "shush: crontab
updated.". Finally, any line of output produced on the standard error will be displayed in bold in mails
sent to "root".
SEE ALSO
crontab(1), pcre(3), regex(3), sendmail(1), sh(1).
AVAILABILITY
The latest official release of shush is available on the web. The home page is
http://web.taranis.org/shush/
AUTHOR
Christophe Kalt <kalt@taranis.org>
BUGS
The -C option does not allow specifying an ID.
For other bugs, send reports to `shush-bugs@taranis.org'.
$Date: 2007-09-30 23:38:23 $ SHUSH(1)