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I start jenkins web server using command java -jar jenkins.war. It works great. When I close terminal the application stops.

How to make it run even if I close terminal session ?

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5 Answers 5

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The simplest and most direct method is nohup java -jar jenkins.war &. "nohup" means "no hangup", which is vintage terminology for not ending a session when the terminal disconnects. "&" just starts the process in the background, similar to what would happen if you press CTRL+Z (and then type bg 1) while the process is running in the foreground.

WARNING: nohup, by default, sends output of the process to a text file. If you are not careful, that file can become dangerously large in some cases. Treat it like any other ever-growing log file.

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  • Curious why you chose nohup rather than setsid since setsid disconnects the process from the controlling terminal? I switched to using setsid after nohup just wasn't reliable with terminal session; since setsid makes a process its own “session leader” which isn’t controlled by any terminal. If it isn’t controlled by a terminal it won’t get a SIGHUP when the terminal closes. Maybe I'm missing something?
    – JohnZaj
    Aug 21, 2019 at 3:56
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Install screen. In the terminal type screen and then run you application. Press CTRL+A,CTRL+D to deattache the screen and type the terminal screen -r to reattache. You can reach you screen through ssh etc...

apt-get install screen
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Use nohup

No Hang Up. Run a command immune to hangups, runs the given command with hangup signals ignored, so that the command can continue running in the background after you log out.ManPage

nohup Command &

In you case it would be

nohup java -jar jenkins.war &
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  • forgot & to background the process.
    – Rmano
    Dec 12, 2013 at 16:42
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If you are frequently starting a service like Jenkins that you want to have run in the background and not close when you end your session, you should consider implementing an init script for it. Look at the scripts in /etc/init.d/ for examples. These are short shell scripts that allow you to do things like service httpd start and service httpd stop and even service httpd status to find out if httpd is running, or if it's supposed to be running but isn't.

There is a great example script for the Hudson service, which functions very similarly to Jenkins (they are sibling forks of the same codebase) here: https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/HudsonUbuntuLinuxStartupScript

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append & after your command , I mean

java -jar jenkins.war &
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    may I know why downvote ?
    – Raja G
    Dec 12, 2013 at 16:28
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    Probably because in modern shells, if you do not do nohup (or disown the process afterward) it will be killed when the shell exits.
    – Rmano
    Dec 12, 2013 at 16:41
  • I have tested firefox from terminal before I have posted my answer here.
    – Raja G
    Dec 12, 2013 at 16:44
  • Probably firefox ignores SIGHUP natively --- don't really know. I tried with sleep and it is killed exiting the shell.
    – Rmano
    Dec 12, 2013 at 16:57
  • @rajagenupula When you type firefox from a console, you're running a script that later launches the firefox binary detached from your console. That step is not automatic for most commands.
    – Sparr
    Dec 13, 2013 at 19:49

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