README.txt 23 KB

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  1. Supervisor: A System for Allowing the Control of Process State on UNIX
  2. History
  3. 7/3/2006: updated for version 2.0
  4. Introduction
  5. The supervisor is a client/server system that allows its users to
  6. control a number of processes on UNIX-like operating systems. It
  7. was inspired by the following:
  8. - It is often inconvenient to need to write "rc.d" scripts for
  9. every single process instance. rc.d scripts are a great
  10. lowest-common-denominator form of process
  11. initialization/autostart/management, but they can be painful to
  12. write and maintain. Additionally, rc.d scripts cannot
  13. automatically restart a crashed process and many programs do not
  14. restart themselves properly on a crash. Supervisord starts
  15. processes as its subprocesses, and can be configured to
  16. automatically restart them on a crash. It can also automatically
  17. be configured to start processes on its own invocation.
  18. - It's often difficult to get accurate up/down status on processes
  19. on UNIX. Pidfiles often lie. Supervisord starts processes as
  20. subprocesses, so it always knows the true up/down status of its
  21. children and can be queried conveniently for this data.
  22. - Users who need to control process state often need only to do
  23. that. They don't want or need full-blown shell access to the
  24. machine on which the processes are running. Supervisorctl allows
  25. a very limited form of access to the machine, essentially
  26. allowing users to see process status and control
  27. supervisord-controlled subprocesses by emitting "stop", "start",
  28. and "restart" commands from a simple shell or web UI.
  29. - Users often need to control processes on many machines.
  30. Supervisor provides a simple, secure, and uniform mechanism for
  31. interactively and automatically controlling processes on groups
  32. of machines.
  33. - Processes which listen on "low" TCP ports often need to be
  34. started and restarted as the root user (a UNIX misfeature). It's
  35. usually the case that it's perfectly fine to allow "normal"
  36. people to stop or restart such a process, but providing them with
  37. shell access is often impractical, and providing them with root
  38. access or sudo access is often impossible. It's also (rightly)
  39. difficult to explain to them why this problem exists. If
  40. supervisord is started as root, it is possible to allow "normal"
  41. users to control such processes without needing to explain the
  42. intricacies of the problem to them.
  43. - Processes often need to be started and stopped in groups,
  44. sometimes even in a "priority order". It's often difficult to
  45. explain to people how to do this. Supervisor allows you to
  46. assign priorities to processes, and allows user to emit commands
  47. via the supervisorctl client like "start all", and "restart all",
  48. which starts them in the preassigned priority order.
  49. Supported Platforms
  50. Supervisor has been tested and is known to run on Linux (Fedora Core
  51. 5, Ubuntu 6), Mac OS X (10.4), and Solaris (10 for Intel) and
  52. FreeBSD 6.1. It will likely work fine on most UNIX systems.
  53. Supervisor will not run at all under any version of Windows.
  54. Supervisor requires Python 2.3 or better.
  55. Installing
  56. Run "python setup.py install", then copy the "sample.conf" file to
  57. /etc/supervisord.conf and modify to your liking. If you'd rather
  58. not put the supervisord.conf file in /etc, you can place it anywhere
  59. and start supervisord and point it at the configuration file via the
  60. -c flag, e.g. "python supervisord.py -c /path/to/sample/conf" or, if
  61. you use the shell script named "supervisord", "supervisord -c
  62. /path/to/sample.conf".
  63. I make reference below to a "$BINDIR" when explaining how to run
  64. supervisord and supervisorctl. This is the "bindir" directory that
  65. your Python installation has been configured with. For example, for
  66. an installation of Python installed via "./configure
  67. --prefix=/usr/local/python; make; make install", $BINDIR would be
  68. "/usr/local/python/bin". Python interpreters on different platforms
  69. use different $BINDIRs. Look at the output of "setup.py install" if
  70. you can't figure out where yours is.
  71. Running Supervisord
  72. To start supervisord, run $BINDIR/supervisord. The resulting
  73. process will daemonize itself and detach from the terminal. It
  74. keeps an operations log at "/tmp/supervisor.log" by default.
  75. You can start supervisord in the foreground by passing the "-n" flag
  76. on its command line. This is useful to debug startup problems.
  77. To change the set of programs controlled by supervisord, edit the
  78. supervisord.conf file and kill -HUP or otherwise restart the
  79. supervisord process. This file has several example program
  80. definitions. Controlled programs should themselves not be daemons,
  81. as supervisord assumes it is responsible for daemonizing its
  82. subprocesses.
  83. Supervisord accepts a number of command-line overrides. Type
  84. 'supervisord -h' for an overview.
  85. Running Supervisorctl
  86. To start supervisorctl, run $BINDIR/supervisorctl. A shell will
  87. be presented that will allow you to control the processes that are
  88. currently managed by supervisord. Type "help" at the prompt to get
  89. information about the supported commands.
  90. supervisorctl may be invoked with "one time" commands when invoked
  91. with arguments from a command line. An example: "supervisorctl stop
  92. all". If arguments are present on the supervisorctl command-line,
  93. it will prevent the interactive shell from being invoked. Instead,
  94. the command will be executed and supervisorctl will exit.
  95. If supervisorctl is invoked in interactive mode against a
  96. supervisord that requires authentication, you will be asked for
  97. authentication credentials.
  98. Components
  99. Supervisord
  100. The server piece of the supervisor is named "supervisord". It is
  101. responsible for responding to commands from the client process as
  102. well as restarting crashed processes. It is meant to be run as
  103. the root user in most production setups. NOTE: see "Security
  104. Notes" at the end of this document for caveats!
  105. The server process uses a configuration file. This is typically
  106. located in "/etc/supervisord.conf". This configuration file is an
  107. "Windows-INI" style config file. It is important to keep this
  108. file secure via proper filesystem permissions because it may
  109. contain unencrypted usernames and passwords.
  110. Supervisorctl
  111. The command-line client piece of the supervisor is named
  112. "supervisorctl". It provides a shell-like interface to the
  113. features provided by supervisord. From supervisorctl, a user can
  114. connect to different supervisord processes, get status on the
  115. subprocesses controlled by a supervisord, stop and start
  116. subprocesses of a supervisord, and get lists of running processes
  117. of a supervisord.
  118. The command-line client talks to the server across a UNIX domain
  119. socket or an Internet socket. The server can assert that the user
  120. of a client should present authentication credentials before it
  121. allows him to perform commands. The client process may use the
  122. same configuration file as the server; any configuration file with
  123. a [supervisorctl] section in it will work.
  124. Web Server
  125. A (sparse) web user interface with functionality comparable to
  126. supervisorctl may be accessed via a browser if you start
  127. supervisord against an internet socket. Visit the server URL
  128. (e.g. http://localhost:9001/) to view and control process status
  129. through the web interface after changing the configuration file's
  130. 'http_port' parameter appropriately.
  131. XML-RPC Interface
  132. The same HTTP server which serves the web UI serves up an XML-RPC
  133. interface that can be used to interrogate and control supervisor
  134. and the programs it runs. To use the XML-RPC interface, connect
  135. to supervisor's http port with any XML-RPC client library and run
  136. commands against it. An example of doing this using Python's
  137. xmlrpclib client library::
  138. import xmlrpclib
  139. server = xmlrpclib.Server('http://localhost:9001')
  140. Call methods against the supervisor and its subprocesses by using
  141. the 'supervisor' namespace::
  142. server.supervisor.getState()
  143. You can get a list of methods supported by supervisor's XML-RPC
  144. interface by using the XML-RPC 'system.listMethods' API:
  145. server.system.listMethods()
  146. You can see help on a method by using the 'system.methodHelp' API
  147. against the method::
  148. print server.system.methodHelp('supervisor.shutdown')
  149. Supervisor's XML-RPC interface also supports the nascent
  150. "XML-RPC multicall API":http://www.xmlrpc.com/discuss/msgReader$1208 .
  151. Configuration File '[supervisord]' Section Settings
  152. The supervisord.conf log file contains a section named
  153. '[supervisord]' in which global settings for the supervisord process
  154. should be inserted. These are:
  155. 'http_port' -- Either a TCP host:port value or (e.g. 127.0.0.1:9001)
  156. or a path to a UNIX domain socket (e.g. /tmp/supervisord.sock) on
  157. which supervisor will listen for HTTP/XML-RPC requests.
  158. Supervisorctl itself uses XML-RPC to communicate with supervisord
  159. over this port.
  160. 'sockchmod' -- Change the UNIX permission mode bits of the http_port
  161. UNIX domain socket to this value (ignored if using a TCP socket).
  162. Default: 0700.
  163. 'sockchown' -- Change the user and group of the socket file to this
  164. value. May be a username (e.g. chrism) or a username and group
  165. separated by a dot (e.g. chrism.wheel) Default: do not change.
  166. 'umask' -- The umask of the supervisord process. Default: 022.
  167. 'logfile' -- The path to the activity log of the supervisord process.
  168. 'logfile_maxbytes' -- The maximum number of bytes that may be
  169. consumed by the activity log file before it is rotated (suffix
  170. multipliers like "KB", "MB", and "GB" can be used in the value).
  171. Set this value to 0 to indicate an unlimited log size. Default:
  172. 50MB.
  173. 'logfile_backups' -- The number of backups to keep around resulting
  174. from activity log file rotation. Set this to 0 to indicate an
  175. unlimited number of backups. Default: 10.
  176. 'loglevel' -- The logging level, dictating what is written to the
  177. activity log. One of 'critical', 'error', 'warn', 'info', 'debug'
  178. or 'trace'. At log level 'trace', the supervisord log file will
  179. record the stderr/stdout output of its child processes, which is
  180. useful for debugging. Default: info.
  181. 'pidfile' -- The location in which supervisord keeps its pid file.
  182. 'nodaemon' -- If true, supervisord will start in the foreground
  183. instead of daemonizing. Default: false.
  184. 'minfds' -- The minimum number of file descriptors that must be
  185. available before supervisord will start successfully. Default:
  186. 1024.
  187. 'minprocs' -- The minimum nymber of process descriptors that must be
  188. available before supervisord will start successfully. Default: 200.
  189. 'nocleanup' -- prevent supervisord from clearing old "AUTO" log
  190. files at startup time. Default: false.
  191. 'http_username' -- the username required for authentication to our
  192. HTTP server. Default: none.
  193. 'http_password' -- the password required for authentication to our
  194. HTTP server. Default: none.
  195. 'childlogdir' -- the directory used for AUTO log files. Default:
  196. value of Python's tempfile.get_tempdir().
  197. 'user' -- if supervisord is run as root, switch users to this UNIX
  198. user account before doing any meaningful processing. This value has
  199. no effect if supervisord is not run as root. Default: do not switch
  200. users.
  201. 'directory' -- When supervisord daemonizes, switch to this
  202. directory. Default: do not cd.
  203. Configuration File '[supervisorctl]' Section Settings
  204. The configuration file may contain settings for the supervisorctl
  205. interactive shell program. These options are listed below.
  206. 'serverurl' -- The URL that should be used to access the supervisord
  207. server, e.g. "http://localhost:9001". For UNIX domain sockets, use
  208. "unix:///absolute/path/to/file.sock".
  209. 'username' -- The username to pass to the supervisord server for use
  210. in authentication (should be same as 'http_username' in supervisord
  211. config). Optional.
  212. 'password' -- The password to pass to the supervisord server for use
  213. in authentication (should be the same as 'http_password' in
  214. supervisord config). Optional.
  215. 'prompt' -- String used as supervisorctl prompt. Default: supervisor.
  216. Configuration File '[program:x]' Section Settings
  217. The .INI file must contain one or more 'program' sections in order
  218. for supervisord to know which programs it should start and control.
  219. A sample program section has the following structure, the options of
  220. which are described below it::
  221. [program:programname]
  222. command=/path/to/programname
  223. priority=1
  224. autostart=true
  225. autorestart=true
  226. startsecs=10
  227. startretries=3
  228. exitcodes=0,2
  229. stopsignal=TERM
  230. stopwaitsecs=10
  231. user=nobody
  232. log_stdout=true
  233. log_stderr=false
  234. logfile=/tmp/programname.log
  235. logfile_maxbytes=10MB
  236. logfile_backups=2
  237. '[program:programname]' -- the section header, required for each
  238. program. 'programname' is a descriptive name (arbitrary) used to
  239. describe the program being run.
  240. 'command' -- the command that will be run when this program is
  241. started. The command can be either absolute,
  242. e.g. ('/path/to/programname') or relative ('programname'). If it is
  243. relative, the PATH will be searched for the executable. Programs
  244. can accept arguments, e.g. ('/path/to/program foo bar'). The
  245. command line can used double quotes to group arguments with spaces
  246. in them to pass to the program, e.g. ('/path/to/program/name -p "foo
  247. bar"').
  248. 'priority' -- the relative priority of the program in the start and
  249. shutdown ordering. Lower priorities indicate programs that start
  250. first and shut down last at startup and when aggregate commands are
  251. used in various clients (e.g. "start all"/"stop all"). Higher
  252. priorities indicate programs that start last and shut down first.
  253. Default: 999.
  254. 'autostart' -- If true, this program will start automatically when
  255. supervisord is started. Default: true.
  256. 'autorestart' -- If true, when the program exits "unexpectedly",
  257. supervisor will restart it automatically. "unexpected" exits are
  258. those which happen when the program exits with an "unexpected" exit
  259. code (see 'exitcodes'). Default: true.
  260. 'startsecs' -- The total number of seconds which the program needs
  261. to stay running after a startup to consider the start successful.
  262. If the program does not stay up for this many seconds after it is
  263. started, even if it exits with an "expected" exit code, the startup
  264. will be considered a failure. Set to 0 to indicate that the program
  265. needn't stay running for any particular amount of time. Default: 1.
  266. 'startretries' -- The number of serial failure attempts that
  267. supervisord will allow when attempting to start the program before
  268. giving up and puting the process into an ERROR state. Default: 3.
  269. 'exitcodes' -- The list of 'expected' exit codes for this program.
  270. A program is considered 'failed' (and will be restarted, if
  271. autorestart is set true) if it exits with an exit code which is not
  272. in this list and a stop of the program has not been explicitly
  273. requested. Default: 0,2.
  274. 'stopsignal' -- The signal used to kill the program when a stop is
  275. requested. This can be any of TERM, HUP, INT, QUIT, KILL, USR1, or
  276. USR2. Default: TERM.
  277. 'stopwaitsecs' -- The number of seconds to wait for the program to
  278. return a SIGCHILD to supervisord after the program has been sent a
  279. stopsignal. If this number of seconds elapses before supervisord
  280. receives a SIGCHILD from the process, supervisord will attempt to
  281. kill it with a final SIGKILL. Default: 10.
  282. 'user' -- If supervisord is running as root, this UNIX user account
  283. will be used as the account which runs the program. If supervisord
  284. is not running as root, this option has no effect. Defaut: do not
  285. switch users.
  286. 'log_stdout' -- Send process stdout output to the process logfile.
  287. Default: true.
  288. 'log_stderr' -- Send process stderr output to the process logfile.
  289. Default: false.
  290. 'logfile' -- Keep process output as determined by log_stdout and
  291. log_stderr in this file. NOTE: if both log_stderr and log_stdout
  292. are true, chunks of output from the process' stderr and stdout will
  293. be intermingled more or less randomly in the log. If 'logfile' is
  294. unset or set to 'AUTO', supervisor will automatically choose a file
  295. location. If this is set to 'NONE', supervisord will create no log
  296. file. AUTO log files and their backups will be deleted when
  297. supervisord restarts. Default: AUTO.
  298. 'logfile_maxbytes' -- The maximum number of bytes that may be
  299. consumed by the process log file before it is rotated (suffix
  300. multipliers like "KB", "MB", and "GB" can be used in the value).
  301. Set this value to 0 to indicate an unlimited log size. Default:
  302. 50MB.
  303. 'logfile_backups' -- The number of backups to keep around resulting
  304. from process log file rotation. Set this to 0 to indicate an
  305. unlimited number of backups. Default: 10.
  306. Examples of Program Configurations
  307. Postgres 8.14::
  308. [program:postgres]
  309. command=/path/to/postmaster
  310. ; we use the "fast" shutdown signal SIGINT
  311. stopsignal=INT
  312. Zope 2.8 instances and ZEO::
  313. [program:zeo]
  314. command=/path/to/runzeo
  315. priority=1
  316. [program:zope1]
  317. command=/path/to/instance/home/bin/runzope
  318. priority=2
  319. log_stderr=true
  320. [program:zope2]
  321. command=/path/to/another/instance/home/bin/runzope
  322. priority=2
  323. log_stderr=true
  324. OpenLDAP slapd::
  325. [program:slapd]
  326. command=/path/to/slapd -f /path/to/slapd.conf -h ldap://0.0.0.0:8888
  327. Process States
  328. A process controlled by supervisord will be in one of the below
  329. states at any given time. You may see these state names in various
  330. user interface elements.
  331. STOPPED (0) -- The process has been stopped due to a stop request or
  332. has never been started.
  333. STARTING (10) -- The process is starting due to a start request.
  334. RUNNING (20) -- The process is running.
  335. BACKOFF (30) -- The process is waiting to restart after a nonfatal error.
  336. STOPPING (40) -- The process is stopping due to a stop request.
  337. EXITED (100) -- The process exited with an expected exit code.
  338. FATAL (200) -- The process could not be started successfully.
  339. UNKNOWN (1000) -- The process is in an unknown state (programming error).
  340. Process progress through these states as per the following directed
  341. graph::
  342. STOPPED
  343. ^ |
  344. / |
  345. STOPPING |
  346. ^ V
  347. | STARTING <-----> BACKOFF
  348. | / \
  349. | V V
  350. \-- RUNNING FATAL
  351. |
  352. V
  353. EXITED
  354. A process is in the STOPPED state if it has been stopped
  355. adminstratively or if it has never been started.
  356. When an autorestarting process is in the BACKOFF state, it will be
  357. automatically restarted by supervisord. It will switch between
  358. STARTING and BACKOFF states until it becomes evident that it cannot
  359. be started because the number of startretries has exceeded the
  360. maximum, at which point it will transition to the FATAL state. Each
  361. start retry will take progressively more time.
  362. An autorestarted process will never be automtatically restarted if
  363. it ends up in the FATAL state (it must be manually restarted from
  364. this state).
  365. A process transitions into the STOPPING state via an administrative
  366. stop request, and will then end up in the STOPPED state.
  367. A process that cannot be stopped successfully will stay in the
  368. STOPPING state forever. This situation should never be reached
  369. during normal operations as it implies that the process did not
  370. respond to a final SIGKILL, which is "impossible" under UNIX.
  371. Terminal states are "STOPPED", "FATAL", "EXITED", and "UNKNOWN".
  372. All other states are transitional.
  373. Signals
  374. Killing supervisord with SIGHUP will stop all processes, reload the
  375. configuration from the config file, and restart all processes.
  376. Killing supervisord with SIGUSR2 will close and reopen the
  377. supervisord activity log and child log files.
  378. Access Control
  379. The UNIX permissions on the socket effectively control who may send
  380. commands to the server. HTTP basic authentication provides access
  381. control for internet and UNIX domain sockets as necessary.
  382. Security Notes
  383. I have done my best to assure that use of a supervisord process
  384. running as root cannot lead to unintended privilege escalation, but
  385. caveat emptor. Particularly, it is not as paranoid as something
  386. like DJ Bernstein's "daemontools", inasmuch as "supervisord" allows
  387. for arbitrary path specifications in its configuration file to which
  388. data may be written. Allowing arbitrary path selections can create
  389. vulnerabilities from symlink attacks. Be careful when specifying
  390. paths in your configuration. Ensure that supervisord's
  391. configuration file cannot be read from or written to by unprivileged
  392. users and that all files installed by the supervisor package have
  393. "sane" file permission protection settings. Additionally, ensure
  394. that your PYTHONPATH is sane and that all Python standard library
  395. files have adequate file permission protections. Then, pray to the
  396. deity of your choice.
  397. Other Notes
  398. Some examples of shell scripts to start services under supervisor
  399. can be found "here":http://www.thedjbway.org/services.html. These
  400. examples are actually for daemontools but the premise is the same
  401. for supervisor.
  402. Some processes (like mysqld) ignore signals sent to the actual
  403. process/thread which is created by supervisord. Instead, a
  404. "special" thread/process is created by these kinds of programs which
  405. is responsible for handling signals. This is problematic, because
  406. supervisord can only kill a pid which it creates itself, not any
  407. child thread or process of the program it creates. Fortunately,
  408. these programs typically write a pidfile which is meant to be read
  409. in order to kill the process. As a workaround for this case, a
  410. special "pidproxy" program can handle startup of these kinds of
  411. processes. The pidproxy program is a small shim that starts a
  412. process, and upon the receipt of a signal, sends the signal to the
  413. pid provided in a pidfile. A sample supervisord configuration
  414. program entry for a pidproxy-enabled program is provided here:
  415. [program:mysql]
  416. command=/path/to/pidproxy /path/to/pidfile /path/to/mysqld_safe
  417. The pidproxy program is named 'pidproxy.py' and is in the
  418. distribution.
  419. FAQ
  420. My program never starts and supervisor doesn't indicate any error:
  421. Make sure the "x" bit is set on the executable file you're using in
  422. the command= line.
  423. How can I tell if my program is running under supervisor? Supervisor
  424. and its subprocesses share an environment variable
  425. "SUPERVISOR_ENABLED". When a process is run under supervisor, your
  426. program can check for the presence of this variable to determine
  427. whether it is running under supervisor (new in 2.0).
  428. Reporting Bugs
  429. Please report bugs at http://www.plope.com/software/collector .
  430. Author Information
  431. Chris McDonough (chrism@plope.com)
  432. http://www.plope.com