That I'm not 100% sure, but I think the jobs do get killed - even though the 
saves are not dead.
Domi


On 06.09.2012, at 14:59, "Mandeville, Rob" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Just to be sure: they don’t abort their jobs in this case?
>  
> --Rob
>  
> From: [email protected] 
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of domi
> Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2012 8:58 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: JNLP Slave Behavior upon Server Bounce
>  
> Hi Rob,
> yes they are, the slaves automatically reconnect to there master as soon as 
> its available again.
> Domi
>  
> On 06.09.2012, at 13:10, "Mandeville, Rob" <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> I’m running a fairly extensive Jenkins installation with about 120-140 slave 
> nodes, almost entirely on Linux (as is the server).  The server has been 
> hanging and taking up 100% CPU on its server from time to time, so I’ve had 
> to bounce the server.  With 12-hour test cycles, this can be…disruptive.  I 
> am trying to diagnose that problem, but while I’m doing that, I’m also trying 
> to figure out a way to be able to bounce the server and keep the jobs running.
>  
> Currently, all slaves have a launch method of “Launch slave via execution of 
> command on the Master”, and said commands are SSH jobs.  So, when I kill the 
> Jenkins server, its 120+ SSH jobs die because they’re subordinate processes, 
> killing the slaves and any jobs running on them.  I know that you can launch 
> JNLP slaves so that they aren’t subordinate jobs, and won’t get automatically 
> killed by Linux when you kill the server. 
>  
> So my question is: If I have a JNLP slave running a job and its Jenkins 
> server dies, will it re-establish the connection and continue the job it was 
> running when the server comes back up?
>  
> Thanks in advance,
>  
> --Rob
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