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zikzik, 2007-01-16 01:03
Running Lighttpd under daemontools/supervise¶
Lighttpd is well suited to run monitored by the "supervise" program from Daniel J. Bernstein's daemontools package.
To set it up, you must first create a standard service directory structure. In the following example the service directory from where the process starts will be /srv/lighttpd-main/. It consists of the following directory and files:
/srv/lighttpd-main/ # the service directory /srv/lighttpd-main/run # the script that starts lighttpd /srv/lighttpd-main/root/ # lighttpd configuration files go here /srv/lighttpd-main/log/ # the service directory for the logger /srv/lighttpd-main/log/run # the script that starts the logger /srv/lighttpd-main/log/main/ # log files go here
If you're using Gentoo, use /var/services instead of /srv
Note: the "./root/" directory is optional and could be called anything, and we use it here simply to have somewhere to put the configuration file_s_ (we chop up the configuration into several files and use the include statement).
File ./run¶
#!sh #! /bin/sh exec 2>&1 exec lighttpd -D -f ./root/lighttpd.conf
File ./root/lighttpd.conf¶
Apart from your specific settings you probably want to include the following definitions:
server.pid-file = "./root/lighttpd.pid" #server.errorlog must be NOT be set
File ./log/run¶
#!sh #! /bin/sh umask 0027 exec setuidgid nobody multilog ./main
Directory ./log/main/¶
The user that is specified to run multilog (nobody in the above example) must have write access to this directory:
#!ShellExample # chown nobody ./log/main/
After the configuration file is in place, just place a symlink into the svscan service directory (/service in DJB's examples):
#!ShellExample # ln -s /srv/lighttpd-main /service/
(Please visit Wayne Marshalls overview in case you're lost at this point).
That's all you need to get started.
See also LighttpdUnderSuperviseExampleConfiguration.
Runit¶
See also HowToRunLightyWithRunit
(for graceful restart wrapper)
Updated by zikzik almost 18 years ago · 9 revisions