Beginning with OpenRC-0.21 we have our own daemon supervisor,
supervise-daemon
, which can start a daemon and restart it if it
terminates unexpectedly.
The following is a brief guide on using this capability.
-
Use Default start, stop and status functions. If you write your own start, stop and status functions in your service script, none of this will work. You must allow OpenRC to use the default functions.
-
Daemons must not fork. Any daemon that you would like to have monitored by
supervise-daemon
must not fork. Instead, it must stay in the foreground. If the daemon forks, the supervisor will be unable to monitor it.If the daemon can be configured to not fork, this should be done in the daemon's configuration file, or by adding a command line option that instructs it not to fork to the
command_args_foreground
variable shown below.
Health checks are a way to make sure a service monitored by
supervise-daemon
stays healthy. To configure a health check for a
service, you need to write a healthcheck()
function, and optionally an
unhealthy()
function in the service script. Also, you will need to set
the healthcheck_timer
and optionally healthcheck_delay
variables.
The healthcheck()
function is run repeatedly based on the settings of
the healthcheck_*
variables. This function should return zero if the
service is currently healthy or non-zero otherwise.
If the healthcheck()
function returns non-zero, the unhealthy()
function
is run, then the service is restarted. Since the service will be
restarted by the supervisor, the unhealthy function should not try to
restart it; the purpose of the function is to allow any cleanup tasks
other than restarting the service to be run.
The most important setting is the supervisor variable. At the top of your service script, you should set this variable as follows:
supervisor=supervise-daemon
Several other variables affect the way services behave under supervise-daemon. They are documented on the openrc-run man page, but I will list them here for convenience:
command_args_foreground="arguments"
This should be used if the daemon you want to monitor forks and goes to the background by default. This should be set to the command line option that instructs the daemon to stay in the foreground.
healthcheck_delay=seconds
This is the delay, in seconds, before the first health check is run.
If it is not set, we use the value of healthcheck_timer
.
healthcheck_timer=seconds
This is the number of seconds between health checks. If it is not set, no health checks will be run.
respawn_delay
This is the number of seconds to delay before attempting to respawn a supervised process after it dies unexpectedly. The default is to respawn immediately.
respawn_max=x
This is the maximum number of times to respawn a supervised process during the given respawn period. The default is 10. 0 means unlimited.
respawn_period=seconds
This works in conjunction with respawn_max
and respawn_delay
above to
decide if a process should not be respawned for some reason.
For example, if respawn period is 10 and respawn_max
is 2, the process
would need to die 3 times within 10 seconds to no longer be respawned.
Note that respawn_delay
will delay all of this, so in the above scenario
a respawn_delay
of greater than 5 will cause infinite respawns.
By default, this is unset and respawn_max
applies to the entire lifetime
of the service.