How can I set environment variables in my Linux service for Asterisk even though it doesn't have a real user?

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3864877

Question

I have created a linux service that runs as a deamon (and gets started from /etc/init.d/X). I need to set some environment variables that can be accessed by the application.

Here's the scenario. The application is a bunch of Perl AGI scripts that depend on (and therefore need to run as) asterisk user but asterisk doesn't have a shell. Ideally I'd just set this in /home/asterisk/.bashrc but that doesn't exist for asterisk.

How can I set environment variables for my app in the asterisk user's running environment so that my app can use them?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Either set them in the startup script (/etc/init.d/yourdaemon), or put a line in that file that looks like:

. /etc/yourdaemon.env

and put the environment variables in that file, using the syntax export VAR=value. On Red Hat-like systems, I believe the correct place for such a file is /etc/sysconfig. Debian/Ubuntu seems to have /etc/default for this purpose.

OTHER TIPS

If your distro of choice is now using systemd try systemctl edit --full asterisk.service and consider EnvironmentFile and Environment

These files normally live here: /etc/systemd/system/myservice.service e.g cron.service

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