/daemons

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

= Daemons Version 1.1.8

(See Releases for release-specific information)

== What is Daemons?

Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) 
to be <i>run as a daemon</i> and to be <i>controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands</i>.

If you want, you can also use daemons to <i>run blocks of ruby code in a daemon process</i> and to control
these processes from the main application.

Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like <i>exception backtracing</i> 
and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and <i>monitoring</i> and automatic restarting of your processes
if they crash.

== Basic Usage

You can use Daemons in four different ways:

=== 1. Create wrapper scripts for your server scripts or applications

Layout: suppose you have your self-written server <tt>myserver.rb</tt>:

  # this is myserver.rb
  # it does nothing really useful at the moment
  
  loop do
    sleep(5)
  end
  
To use <tt>myserver.rb</tt> in a production environment, you need to be able to
run <tt>myserver.rb</tt> in the _background_ (this means detach it from the console, fork it
in the background, release all directories and file descriptors).

Just create <tt>myserver_control.rb</tt> like this:

  # this is myserver_control.rb
  
  require 'rubygems'        # if you use RubyGems
  require 'daemons'
  
  Daemons.run('myserver.rb')
  
And use it like this from the console:

  $ ruby myserver_control.rb start
      (myserver.rb is now running in the background)
  $ ruby myserver_control.rb restart
      (...)
  $ ruby myserver_control.rb stop
  
For testing purposes you can even run <tt>myserver.rb</tt> <i>without forking</i> in the background:

  $ ruby myserver_control.rb run

An additional nice feature of Daemons is that you can pass <i>additional arguments</i> to the script that 
should be daemonized by seperating them by two _hyphens_:
  
  $ ruby myserver_control.rb start -- --file=anyfile --a_switch another_argument
  

=== 2. Create wrapper scripts that include your server procs

Layout: suppose you have some code you want to run in the background and control that background process
from a script:

  # this is your code
  # it does nothing really useful at the moment
  
  loop do
    sleep(5)
  end
  
To run this code as a daemon create <tt>myproc_control.rb</tt> like this and include your code:

  # this is myproc_control.rb
  
  require 'rubygems'        # if you use RubyGems
  require 'daemons'
  
  Daemons.run_proc('myproc.rb') do
    loop do
      sleep(5)
    end
  end
  
And use it like this from the console:

  $ ruby myproc_control.rb start
      (myproc.rb is now running in the background)
  $ ruby myproc_control.rb restart
      (...)
  $ ruby myproc_control.rb stop
  
For testing purposes you can even run <tt>myproc.rb</tt> <i>without forking</i> in the background:

  $ ruby myproc_control.rb run
  
=== 3. Control a bunch of daemons from another application

Layout: you have an application <tt>my_app.rb</tt> that wants to run a bunch of 
server tasks as daemon processes.

  # this is my_app.rb
  
  require 'rubygems'        # if you use RubyGems
  require 'daemons'
  
  task1 = Daemons.call(:multiple => true) do
    # first server task
    
    loop {
      conn = accept_conn()
      serve(conn)
    }
  end
  
  task2 = Daemons.call do
    # second server task
    
    loop {
      something_different()
    }
  end
  
  # the parent process continues to run
  
  # we can even control our tasks, for example stop them
  task1.stop
  task2.stop
  
  exit
  
=== 4. Daemonize the currently running process

Layout: you have an application <tt>my_daemon.rb</tt> that wants to run as a daemon
(but without the ability to be controlled by daemons via start/stop commands)

  # this is my_daemons.rb
  
  require 'rubygems'        # if you use RubyGems
  require 'daemons'
  
  # Initialize the app while we're not a daemon
  init()
  
  # Become a daemon
  Daemons.daemonize
  
  # The server loop
  loop {
    conn = accept_conn()
    serve(conn)
  }

  
<b>For further documentation, refer to the module documentation of Daemons.</b>

  
== Download and Installation

*Download*: just go to http://rubyforge.org/projects/daemons/

Installation *with* RubyGems:
  $ su
  # gem install daemons
  
Installation *without* RubyGems:
  $ tar xfz daemons-x.x.x.tar.gz
  $ cd daemons-x.x.x
  $ su
  # ruby setup.rb
  
== Documentation

For further documentation, refer to the module documentation of Daemons (click on Daemons).

The RDoc documentation is also online at http://daemons.rubyforge.org


== Author

Written 2005-2010 by Thomas Uehlinger <mailto:th.uehlinger@gmx.ch>.
Anonymous SVN checkout is available with "svn checkout http://daemons.rubyforge.org/svn/".

== License

Copyright (c) 2005-2012 Thomas Uehlinger

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
restriction, including without limitation the rights to use,
copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following
conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

== Feedback and other resources

At http://rubyforge.org/projects/daemons.