Run Python script at startup in Ubuntu
I have a short Python script that needs to run at startup - Ubuntu 13.10. I have tried everything I can think of but can't get it to run. The script:
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
with open("/home/username/Desktop/startup.txt", 'a') as f:
f.write(str(time.time()) + " It worked!")
(The actual script is a bit different, as I'm just using this for testing purposes, but you get the idea.)
I've tried all of the following, with no luck:
Put the command
python startuptest.py
incrontab
, as@reboot python /home/username/Documents/startuptest.py
, both as the regular user and assudo
Put the command
python /home/username/Documents/startuptest.py
in/etc/rc.local
Opened Ubuntu's Startup Applications and put the command there
Done all of the preceding, putting the command into a shell script and calling that shell script instead
Nothing works. I get the feeling I'm missing something simple. Any ideas? (The script runs fine if I just run the command from a terminal.)
Instructions
-
Copy the python file to /bin:
sudo cp -i /path/to/your_script.py /bin
-
Add A New Cron Job:
sudo crontab -e
Scroll to the bottom and add the following line (after all the
#'s
):@reboot python /bin/your_script.py &
The “&” at the end of the line means the command is run in the background and it won’t stop the system booting up.
-
Test it:
sudo reboot
Practical example:
-
Add this file to your Desktop: test_code.py (run it to check that it works for you)
from os.path import expanduser import datetime file = open(expanduser("~") + '/Desktop/HERE.txt', 'w') file.write("It worked!\n" + str(datetime.datetime.now())) file.close()
-
Run the following commands:
sudo cp -i ~/Desktop/test_code.py /bin
sudo crontab -e
-
Add the following line and save it:
@reboot python /bin/test_code.py &
Now reboot your computer and you should find a new file on your Desktop:
HERE.txt
Put this in /etc/init
(Use /etc/systemd
in Ubuntu 15.x)
mystartupscript.conf
start on runlevel [2345]
stop on runlevel [!2345]
exec /path/to/script.py
By placing this conf file there you hook into ubuntu's upstart service that runs services on startup.
manual starting/stopping is done with
sudo service mystartupscript start
and
sudo service mystartupscript stop
If you are on Ubuntu you don't need to write any other code except your Python file's code , Here are the Steps :-
- Open Dash (The First Icon In Sidebar).
- Then type Startup Applications and open that app.
- Here Click the Add Button on the right.
- There fill in the details and in the command area browse for your Python File and click Ok.
- Test it by Restarting System . Done . Enjoy !!
Create file ~/.config/autostart/MyScript.desktop with
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=MyScript
Comment=MyScript
Icon=gnome-info
Exec=python /home/your_path/script.py
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=
X-GNOME-Autostart-enabled=true
X-GNOME-Autostart-Delay=0
It helps me!
In similar situations, I've done well by putting something like the following into /etc/rc.local:
cd /path/to/my/script
./my_script.py &
cd -
echo `date +%Y-%b-%d_%H:%M:%S` > /tmp/ran_rc_local # check that rc.local ran
This has worked on multiple versions of Fedora and on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, for both python and perl scripts.