Have you tried running the script directly on your odroid to see if it outputs anything relevant?
You're calling sudo with no interaction. does sudo require a password on your odroid? If you've started pd and jackd with the same user that runs this script you shouldn't have to call sudo. There is also a way to allow the user to call 'poweroff' but I forget how you set that up.. it might be a group that you have to be in. -Alex On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 9:04 AM, Alexandros Drymonitis <[email protected]> wrote: > I'm trying to shut down my Odroid-U3 by running a script through [shell]. > It's very likely that my approach is not good, but here's what I'm doing: > > I've created a directory /etc/my_scripts and in there I put the following > script, called "shut_down.sh": > > sudo pkill pd > sleep 3 > sudo pkill jackd > sleep 3 > sudo poweroff > > I launch Jack (actually Qjackctl) and then Pd with -jack. In Pd I have > this patch: > > [sh /etc/my_scripts/shut_down.sh( > | > [shell] > > On my Raspberry Pi it works, Pd is killed, jackd is killed, and the the Pi > shuts down. But on the Odroid it doesn't work. Pd is killed but its windows > stay open (I'm using the Odroid via SSH, if this is relevant), and Jack > won't quit, and the Odroid won't shut down. > > I'm on Pd-0.47-1 and a 14.04 LTS Ubuntu image on the Odroid. I've > installed [shell] via apt-get. > > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> https://lists.puredata.info/ > listinfo/pd-list > >
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