Daemon(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Daemon(3pm) |
App::Daemon - Start an Application as a Daemon
# Program: use App::Daemon qw( daemonize ); daemonize(); do_something_useful(); # your application # Then, in the shell: start application, # which returns immediately, but continues # to run do_something_useful() in the background $ app start $ # stop application $ app stop # start app in foreground (for testing) $ app -X # show if app is currently running $ app status
"App::Daemon" helps running an application as a daemon. The idea is that you prepend your script with the
use App::Daemon qw( daemonize ); daemonize();
and 'daemonize' it that way. That means, that if you write
use App::Daemon qw( daemonize ); daemonize(); sleep(10);
you'll get a script that, when called from the command line, returns immediately, but continues to run as a daemon for 10 seconds.
Along with the common features offered by similar modules on CPAN, it
./my-app status Pid file: ./tt.pid Pid in file: 14914 Running: no Name match: 0
"App::Daemon" recognizes three different actions:
$ ./my-app $
will also run the 'start' action. By default, it will create a pid file and a log file in the current directory (named "my-app.pid" and "my-app.log". To change these locations, see the "-l" and "-p" options.
If the -X option is given, the program is running in foreground mode for testing purposes:
$ ./my-app -X ...
To have App::Daemon send a different signal than SIGTERM (e.g., SIGINT), set
use POSIX; $App::Daemon::kill_sig = SIGINT;
Note that his requires the numerial value (SIGINT via POSIX.pm), not a string like "SIGINT".
Pid file: ./tt.pid Pid in file: 15562 Running: yes Name match: 1 /usr/local/bin/perl -w test.pl
This indicates that the pidfile says that the daemon has PID 15562 and that a process with this PID is actually running at this moment. Also, a name grep on the process name in the process table results in 1 match, according to the output above.
Note that the name match is unreliable, as it just looks for a command line that looks approximately like the script itself. So if the script is "test.pl", it will match lines like "perl -w test.pl" or "perl test.pl start", but unfortunately also lines like "vi test.pl".
If the process is no longer running, the status output might look like this instead:
Pid file: ./tt.pid Pid in file: 14914 Running: no Name match: 0
The status commands exit code complies with
http://refspecs.freestandards.org/LSB_3.1.1/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/iniscrptact.html
and returns
0: if the process is up and running 1: the process is dead but the pid file still exists 3: the process is not running
These constants are defined within App::Daemon to help writing test scripts:
use constant LSB_OK => 0; use constant LSB_DEAD_PID_EXISTS => 1; use constant LSB_DEAD_LOCK_EXISTS => 2; use constant LSB_NOT_RUNNING => 3; use constant LSB_UNKNOWN => 4; use constant ALREADY_RUNNING => 150;
Instead of setting paramteters like the logfile, the pidfile etc. from the command line, you can directly manipulate App::Daemon's global variables:
use App::Daemon qw(daemonize); $App::Daemon::logfile = "mylog.log"; $App::Daemon::pidfile = "mypid.log"; $App::Daemon::l4p_conf = "myconf.l4p"; $App::Daemon::background = 1; $App::Daemon::as_user = "nobody"; $App::Daemon::as_group = "nogroup"; use Log::Log4perl qw(:levels); $App::Daemon::loglevel = $DEBUG; daemonize();
If an application needs additional command line options, it can use whatever is not yet taken by App::Daemon, as described previously in the "Command Line Options" section.
However, it needs to make sure to remove these additional options before calling daemonize(), or App::Daemon will complain. To do this, create an options hash %opts and store application-specific options in there while removing them from @ARGV:
my %opts = (); for my $opt (qw(-k -P -U)) { my $v = App::Daemon::find_option( $opt, 1 ); $opts{ $opt } = $v if defined $v; }
After this, options "-k", "-P", and "-U" will have disappeared from @ARGV and can be checked in $opts{k}, $opts{P}, and $opts{U}.
If they're created as root when the program starts, the non-priviledged user won't be able to write to them later (unless they're world-writable which is also undesirable because of security concerns).
The best strategy to handle this case is to specify the non-priviledged user as the owner of the logfile in the Log4perl configuration:
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, FileApp log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = /var/log/foo-app.log log4perl.appender.FileApp.owner = nobody log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout = PatternLayout log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %d %m%n
This way, the process starts up as root, creates the logfile if it doesn't exist yet, and changes its owner to 'nobody'. Later, when the process assumes the identity of the user 'nobody', it will continue to write to the logfile without permission problems.
log4perl.logger=DEBUG, appendername
then App::Daemon's messages will bubble up to it and be visible in the output. If you don't want that, either use
log4perl.logger.My.App=DEBUG, appendername
to explicitly enable verbose logging in your application namespace (and not in App::Daemon's) or tone down App::Daemon's verbosity via
log4perl.logger.App.Daemon=ERROR
explicitly. If you want more details on basic Log4perl features, check out the Log::Log4perl manual page.
If you want to create a daemon without the fancy command line parsing and PID file checking functions, use
use App::Daemon qw(detach); detach(); # ... some code here
This will fork a child, terminate the parent and detach the child from the terminal. Issued from the command line, the program above will continue to run the code following the detach() call but return to the shell prompt immediately.
2008, Mike Schilli <cpan@perlmeister.com>
Copyright 2008-2012 by Mike Schilli, all rights reserved. This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2018-07-08 | perl v5.26.2 |