Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
Errin Larsen wrote: Ok ... so with some research and playi^H^H^H^H^Htesting I've found the answer to what's really been bothering me. If you *really* want to understand the nuts and bolts of all this, Stevens' _Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment_ is a must. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201563177 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
Bob Showalter wrote: Errin Larsen wrote: Ok ... so with some research and playi^H^H^H^H^Htesting I've found the answer to what's really been bothering me. If you *really* want to understand the nuts and bolts of all this, Stevens' _Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment_ is a must. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201563177 Since the OP mentioned that he is using Solaris he may want to get this book instead: http://www.rite-group.com/rich/ssp/index.html John -- use Perl; program fulfillment -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Daemon that starts other Daemons
Hi perl-people, I'm not sure if this is beginners stuff, but I'll post here 'cause it's the only list I'm subscribed to at the moment. I'm writing a script that will daemonize itself, and then watch some processes. If one of those processes die, it will start it again. So, I've been reading the perlipc docs and I found this handy code on proper daemonization: use POSIX 'setsid'; sub daemonize { #it's polite for daemons to chdir to root so that they #don't prevent a filesystem from being unmounted chdir '/' or die Can't chdir to /: $!; #it's also polite for daemons to redirect all output to #/dev/null so users don't get random output open STDIN, '/dev/null' or die Can't read /dev/null: $!; open STDOUT, '/dev/null' or die Can't write to /dev/null:$!; #the parent get's the new child's pid back, the child gets '0' back defined( my $pid = fork ) or die Can't fork: $!; #here's where I start having problem. This code assumes that #the parent will be exiting, thus leaving the child able #to run setsid exit if $pid; setsid or die Can't start a new session: $!; open STDERR, 'STDOUT' or die Can't dup STDOUT: $!; } perlipc goes on to explain: The fork() has to come before the setsid() to ensure that you aren't a process leader (the setsid() will fail if you are). So, my question is, how do I implement this code WITHOUT the parent process dieing? --Errin -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 11:23:16 -0500, Errin Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi perl-people, SNIP So, my question is, how do I implement this code WITHOUT the parent process dieing? --Errin I found that (at least on the Solaris OS that I'm working on) that the setsid function will setup a new session UNLESS: The calling process is already a process group leader, or the process group ID of a process other than the calling process matches the process ID of the calling process. So, I think that's saying that as long as the process (the child) does not have any children of it's own, then I'll be ok with the above code! Is that what the blurb above is saying? (Why are UNIX docs always so darn hard to read!!?) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
Hi perl-people, I'm not sure if this is beginners stuff, but I'll post here 'cause it's the only list I'm subscribed to at the moment. A stretch, but there have been more complex topics discussed. This is pretty much a catch all and some of the experts will probably appreciate not answering the same how do I delete an element of an array question :-). I'm writing a script that will daemonize itself, and then watch some processes. If one of those processes die, it will start it again. So, I've been reading the perlipc docs and I found this handy code on proper daemonization: Great docs... however... use POSIX 'setsid'; sub daemonize { #it's polite for daemons to chdir to root so that they #don't prevent a filesystem from being unmounted chdir '/' or die Can't chdir to /: $!; #it's also polite for daemons to redirect all output to #/dev/null so users don't get random output open STDIN, '/dev/null' or die Can't read /dev/null: $!; open STDOUT, '/dev/null' or die Can't write to /dev/null:$!; #the parent get's the new child's pid back, the child gets '0' back defined( my $pid = fork ) or die Can't fork: $!; #here's where I start having problem. This code assumes that #the parent will be exiting, thus leaving the child able #to run setsid exit if $pid; setsid or die Can't start a new session: $!; open STDERR, 'STDOUT' or die Can't dup STDOUT: $!; } perlipc goes on to explain: The fork() has to come before the setsid() to ensure that you aren't a process leader (the setsid() will fail if you are). So, my question is, how do I implement this code WITHOUT the parent process dieing? --Errin Actually you want the parent process to die... or at least exit, then your child process is the session leader and will do everything else you need, aka fork more children in your case. Essentially you want to make it so that the tty/shell (whatever) no longer thinks it has absentee children so that it can exit cleanly, by daemonizing your process essentially becomes a child of the kernel, which will always be running (until shutdown that is). However, the best advice NOT given by perldoc perlipc is to use the Proc::Daemon::Init module, it is incredibly easy and takes care of all of the code you mention above by itself, in a neat package that you don't have to worry about the internals of. It is available through CPAN as usual, and despite its incredibly low release number (if you are into that hole thing) I have never had problems with it. Two additional comments, that you are likely to stumble across: 1. How do I get back to my process after it has daemonized, how do I stop it, etc? This is where you will likely want to get into writing a pid file to the disk so that your process can be looked up and signaled, and/or to prevent two copies of your daemon running, or at least trying to work on teh same resources. 2. How do I do logging, etc.? Check out the very, very excellent Log::Log4perl suite, it is incredible and can accomplish just about all of your logging needs. Of course I have already mentioned POE but I will plug it again. http://danconia.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 11:23:16 -0500, Errin Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi perl-people, SNIP So, my question is, how do I implement this code WITHOUT the parent process dieing? --Errin I found that (at least on the Solaris OS that I'm working on) that the setsid function will setup a new session UNLESS: The calling process is already a process group leader, or the process group ID of a process other than the calling process matches the process ID of the calling process. So, I think that's saying that as long as the process (the child) does not have any children of it's own, then I'll be ok with the above code! Is that what the blurb above is saying? (Why are UNIX docs always so darn hard to read!!?) That is the way I read it, though see the suggestion in my other post... http://danconia.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Daemon that starts other Daemons
-- Forwarded message -- From: Errin Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Thu, 23 Sep 2004 16:30:21 -0500 Subject: Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons To: Wiggins d Anconia [EMAIL PROTECTED] Hi again, Ok ... so with some research and playi^H^H^H^H^Htesting I've found the answer to what's really been bothering me. If I fork(), I get the PID of the resulting child. However, if THAT child runs and external command, how do I get the (now grand)child's PID. The answer I was looking for was a deeper understanding of exec(). by fork()ing a child and having that child run exec(), the exec()ed command will have the SAME process ID as the original child. In actuality, the exec()ed command is NOT a grandchild, but has taken over the original child's process and all it's environment (STDIN, STDOUT, %ENV, etc.). That's what I needed to know! Now, if I just collect and keep the child's PID, when I run the exec() I'll have the PID of whatever command was exec()ed. Also, with some experimenting, the setsid() doesn't NEED the original parent to die to work, it just needs the child to be forked before it runs setsid(). In other words, if you try to run setsid() BEFORE you fork the child (in an attempt to give both the child and the parent the same session and group ID, perhaps) it will fail. If you instead have the child run setsid() after it is fork()ed, it will run fine, whether the parent is dead or not! YAY!! On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 13:30:08 -0600, Wiggins d Anconia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 11:23:16 -0500, Errin Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi perl-people, SNIP So, my question is, how do I implement this code WITHOUT the parent process dieing? --Errin SNIP Thanks for the help, Wiggins. I agree this would all be easier if I just went a grabbed a module, but for (probably strange) reasons I'd rather not go into, I want to do this from scratch. Also, this has been extremely helpful in teaching me what's going on with the backticks, system(), fork() and exec() functions. This process has really helped me along with my Perl education. Also, I realized that the ORIGINAL parent needs to die (So as to disassociate the daemons from the calling terminal/process), but I was looking for a daemon that would run, start other servers, and that hang around monitoring them. I think we're talking about the same thing here, just I didn't explain it will originally. Now, I just need to implement some code to dump a file with PIDs into /var/run! Thanks for the suggestions/help and I'll get working on it now! --Errin -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
Hi again, Ok ... so with some research and playi^H^H^H^H^Htesting I've found the answer to what's really been bothering me. If I fork(), I get the PID of the resulting child. However, if THAT child runs and external command, how do I get the (now grand)child's PID. The answer I was looking for was a deeper understanding of exec(). Yep. Playing is the best way to go. by fork()ing a child and having that child run exec(), the exec()ed command will have the SAME process ID as the original child. In actuality, the exec()ed command is NOT a grandchild, but has taken over the original child's process and all it's environment (STDIN, STDOUT, %ENV, etc.). That's what I needed to know! Now, if I just collect and keep the child's PID, when I run the exec() I'll have the PID of whatever command was exec()ed. Correct. Also, with some experimenting, the setsid() doesn't NEED the original parent to die to work, it just needs the child to be forked before it runs setsid(). In other words, if you try to run setsid() BEFORE you fork the child (in an attempt to give both the child and the parent the same session and group ID, perhaps) it will fail. If you instead have the child run setsid() after it is fork()ed, it will run fine, whether the parent is dead or not! YAY!! Yep again, making the child a session leader doesn't mean that the parent must go away, more that if it wants to it can. Which is a subtle but important distinction. On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 13:30:08 -0600, Wiggins d Anconia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 11:23:16 -0500, Errin Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi perl-people, SNIP So, my question is, how do I implement this code WITHOUT the parent process dieing? --Errin SNIP Thanks for the help, Wiggins. I agree this would all be easier if I just went a grabbed a module, but for (probably strange) reasons I'd rather not go into, I want to do this from scratch. Also, this has been extremely helpful in teaching me what's going on with the backticks, system(), fork() and exec() functions. This process has really helped me along with my Perl education. Definitely. You are essentially taking the same path through the madness that I did 2 years ago or so, first attempting to understand the reasons and lowlevels, reading lots of docs and making lots of mistakes. Once I figured it out I was very glad because of the amount I learned, but then opted for the module mostly to prevent code maintenance, hassles, etc. We already had roughly 40 other dependencies, and considering it was probably the easiest to install I wasn't concerned about Just Another Module (hmph, JAM, that works pretty well in the glue analogy ;-)). Also, I realized that the ORIGINAL parent needs to die (So as to disassociate the daemons from the calling terminal/process), but I was looking for a daemon that would run, start other servers, and that hang around monitoring them. I think we're talking about the same thing here, just I didn't explain it will originally. Now, I just need to implement some code to dump a file with PIDs into /var/run! Thanks for the suggestions/help and I'll get working on it now! Agreed and yep. --Errin http://danconia.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
On Thu, 23 Sep 2004, Errin Larsen wrote: [] I was looking for a daemon that would run, start other servers, and that hang around monitoring them. In other words, you want something that works like Apache [1.x]. * To launch Apache, you run apachectl, a shell script. * apachectl launches a parent httpd process, which in turns spawns a pool of listener httpd child processes. * apachectl goes away then, and the parent httpd supervises the operation of the server from then on. Granted, the interesting bits are all done in C or something, so that may not help you here, but it's the model you're looking for. -- Chris Devers -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response
Re: Daemon that starts other Daemons
On Thu, 23 Sep 2004, Errin Larsen wrote: [] I was looking for a daemon that would run, start other servers, and that hang around monitoring them. In other words, you want something that works like Apache [1.x]. * To launch Apache, you run apachectl, a shell script. * apachectl launches a parent httpd process, which in turns spawns a pool of listener httpd child processes. * apachectl goes away then, and the parent httpd supervises the operation of the server from then on. Granted, the interesting bits are all done in C or something, so that may not help you here, but it's the model you're looking for. -- Chris Devers If you really want to get into it, Network Programming with Perl has excellent coverage of various common types of daemons and how to write them in Perl. Don't know if you have the resources or time but it is worth a look if the interest is there. My very unprofessional and non-expert review of it is here: http://danconia.org/cgi-bin/request?handler=Content;content=Site_Bookshelf_Book;id=26 http://danconia.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://learn.perl.org/ http://learn.perl.org/first-response