A Python library for creating super fancy Unix daemons
Project description
daemonocle is a library for creating your own Unix-style daemons written in Python. It solves many problems that other daemon libraries have and provides some really useful features you don’t often see in other daemons.
Installation
To install via pip:
pip install daemonocle
Or download the source code and install manually:
git clone https://github.com/jnrbsn/daemonocle.git cd daemonocle/ python setup.py install
Basic Usage
Here’s a really really basic example:
import sys
import time
import daemonocle
# This is your daemon. It sleeps, and then sleeps again.
def main():
while True:
time.sleep(10)
if __name__ == '__main__':
daemon = daemonocle.Daemon(
worker=main,
pid_file='/var/run/daemonocle_example.pid',
)
daemon.do_action(sys.argv[1])
And here’s the same example with logging and a Shutdown Callback:
import logging
import sys
import time
import daemonocle
def cb_shutdown(message, code):
logging.info('Daemon is stopping')
logging.debug(message)
def main():
logging.basicConfig(
filename='/var/log/daemonocle_example.log',
level=logging.DEBUG, format='%(asctime)s [%(levelname)s] %(message)s',
)
logging.info('Daemon is starting')
while True:
logging.debug('Still running')
time.sleep(10)
if __name__ == '__main__':
daemon = daemonocle.Daemon(
worker=main,
shutdown_callback=cb_shutdown,
pid_file='/var/run/daemonocle_example.pid',
)
daemon.do_action(sys.argv[1])
And here’s what it looks like when you run it:
user@host:~$ python example.py start Starting example.py ... OK user@host:~$ python example.py status example.py -- pid: 1234, status: running, uptime: 1m, %cpu: 0.0, %mem: 0.0 user@host:~$ python example.py stop Stopping example.py ... OK user@host:~$ cat /var/log/daemonocle_example.log 2014-05-04 12:39:21,090 [INFO] Daemon is starting 2014-05-04 12:39:21,091 [DEBUG] Still running 2014-05-04 12:39:31,091 [DEBUG] Still running 2014-05-04 12:39:41,091 [DEBUG] Still running 2014-05-04 12:39:51,093 [DEBUG] Still running 2014-05-04 12:40:01,094 [DEBUG] Still running 2014-05-04 12:40:07,113 [INFO] Daemon is stopping 2014-05-04 12:40:07,114 [DEBUG] Terminated by SIGTERM (15)
For more details, see the Detailed Usage section below.
Rationale
If you think about it, a lot of Unix daemons don’t really know what the hell they’re doing. Have you ever found yourself in a situation that looked something like this?
user@host:~$ sudo example start starting example ... ok user@host:~$ ps aux | grep example user 1234 0.0 0.0 1234 1234 pts/1 S+ 12:34 0:00 grep example user@host:~$ sudo example start starting example ... ok user@host:~$ echo $? 0 user@host:~$ tail -f /var/log/example.log ...
Or something like this?
user@host:~$ sudo example stop stopping example ... ok user@host:~$ ps aux | grep example user 123 0.0 0.0 1234 1234 ? Ss 00:00 0:00 /usr/local/bin/example user 1234 0.0 0.0 1234 1234 pts/1 S+ 12:34 0:00 grep example user@host:~$ sudo example stop stopping example ... ok user@host:~$ ps aux | grep example user 123 0.0 0.0 1234 1234 ? Ss 00:00 0:00 /usr/local/bin/example user 1240 0.0 0.0 1234 1234 pts/1 S+ 12:34 0:00 grep example user@host:~$ sudo kill -9 123 ...
Or something like this?
user@host:~$ sudo example status Usage: example {start|stop|restart} user@host:~$ ps aux | grep example ...
These are just a few examples of unnecessarily common problems. It doesn’t have to be this way.
Note: You might be thinking, “Why not just write a smarter start/stop shell script wrapper for your daemon that checks whether or not it actually started, actually stopped, etc.?” Seriously? It doesn’t have to be this way. I believe daemons should be more self-aware. They should handle their own problems most of the time, and your start/stop script should only be a very thin wrapper around your daemon or simply a symlink to your daemon.
The Problem
If you’ve ever dug deep into the nitty-gritty details of how daemonization works, you’re probably familiar with the standard “double fork” paradigm first introduced by W. Richard Stevens in the book Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment. One of the problems with the standard way to implement this is that if the final child dies immediately when it gets around to doing real work, the original parent process (the one that actually had control of your terminal) is long gone. So all you know is that the process got forked, but you have no idea if it actually kept running for more than a fraction of a second. And let’s face it, one of the most likely times for a daemon to die is immediately after it starts (due to bad configuration, permissions, etc.).
The next problem mentioned in the section above is when you try to stop a daemon, it doesn’t actually stop, and you have no idea that it didn’t actually stop. This happens when a process doesn’t respond properly to a SIGTERM signal. It happens more often than it should. The problem is not necessarily the fact that it didn’t stop. It’s the fact that you didn’t know that it didn’t stop. The start/stop script knows that it successfully sent the signal and so it assumes success. This also becomes a problem when your restart command blindly calls stop and then start, because it will try to start a new instance of the daemon before the previous one has exited.
These are the biggest problems most daemons have in my opinion. daemonocle solves these problems and provides many other “fancy” features.
The Solution
The problem with the daemon immediately dying on startup and you not knowing about it is solved by having the first child (the immediate parent of the final child) sleep for one second and then call os.waitpid(pid, os.WNOHANG) to see if the process is still running. This is what daemonocle does. So if you’re daemon dies within one second of starting, you’ll know about it.
This problem with the daemon not stopping and you not knowing about it is solved by simply waiting for the process to finish (with a timeout). This is what daemonocle does. (Note: When a timeout occurs, it doesn’t try to send a SIGKILL. This is not always what you’d want and often not a good idea.)
Other Useful Features
Below are some other useful features that daemononcle provides that you might not find elsewhere.
The status Action
There is a status action that not only displays whether or not the daemon is running and its PID, but also the uptime of the daemon and the % CPU and % memory usage of all the processes in the same process group as the daemon (which are probably its children). So if you have a daemon that launches mulitple worker processes, the status action will show the % CPU and % memory usage of all the workers combined.
It might look something like this:
user@host:~$ python example.py status example.py -- pid: 1234, status: running, uptime: 12d 3h 4m, %cpu: 12.4, %mem: 4.5
You can even get JSON output if you call the action like this:
daemon.do_action('status', json=True)
If you use the Integration with click described below, this option is available via the --json CLI option. You can also just get a dict directly and programatically without printing it to STDOUT by calling Daemon.get_status().
Slightly Smarter restart Action
Have you ever tried to restart a daemon only to realize that it’s not actually running? Let me guess: it just gave you an error and didn’t start the daemon. A lot of the time this is not a problem, but if you’re trying to restart the daemon in an automated way, it’s more annoying to have to check if it’s running and do either a start or restart accordingly. With daemonocle, if you try to restart a daemon that’s not running, it will give you a warning saying that it wasn’t running and then start the daemon. This is often what people expect.
Self-Reload
Daemons that use daemonocle have the ability to reload themselves by simply calling daemon.reload() where daemon is your daemonocle.Daemon instance. The execution of the current daemon halts wherever daemon.reload() was called, and a new daemon is started up to replace the current one. From your code’s perspective, it’s pretty much the same as a doing a restart except that it’s initiated from within the daemon itself and there’s no signal handling involved. Here’s a basic example of a daemon that watches a config file and reloads itself when the config file changes:
import os
import sys
import time
import daemonocle
class FileWatcher(object):
def __init__(self, filename, daemon):
self._filename = filename
self._daemon = daemon
self._file_mtime = os.stat(self._filename).st_mtime
def file_has_changed(self):
current_mtime = os.stat(self._filename).st_mtime
if current_mtime != self._file_mtime:
self._file_mtime = current_mtime
return True
return False
def watch(self):
while True:
if self.file_has_changed():
self._daemon.reload()
time.sleep(1)
if __name__ == '__main__':
daemon = daemonocle.Daemon(pid_file='/var/run/daemonocle_example.pid')
fw = FileWatcher(filename='/etc/daemonocle_example.conf', daemon=daemon)
daemon.worker = fw.watch
daemon.do_action(sys.argv[1])
Shutdown Callback
You may have noticed from the Basic Usage section above that a shutdown_callback was defined. This function gets called whenever the daemon is shutting down in a catchable way, which should be most of the time except for a SIGKILL or if your server crashes unexpectedly or loses power or something like that. This function can be used for doing any sort of cleanup that your daemon needs to do. Also, if you want to log (to the logger of your choice) the reason for the shutdown and the intended exit code, you can use the message and code arguments that will be passed to your callback (your callback must take these two arguments).
Non-Detached Mode
This is not particularly interesting per se, but it’s worth noting that in non-detached mode, your daemon will do everything else you’ve configured it to do (i.e. setuid, setgid, chroot, etc.) except actually detaching from your terminal. So while you’re testing, you can get an extremely accurate view of how your daemon will behave in the wild. It’s also worth noting that self-reloading works in non-detached mode, which was a little tricky to figure out initially.
File Descriptor Handling
One of the things that daemons typically do is close all open file descriptors and establish new ones for STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR that just point to /dev/null. This is fine most of the time, but if your worker is an instance method of a class that opens files in its __init__() method, then you’ll run into problems if you’re not careful. This is also a problem if you’re importing a module that leaves open files behind. For example, importing the random standard library module in Python 3 results in an open file descriptor for /dev/urandom.
Since this “feature” of daemons often causes more problems than it solves, and the problems it causes sometimes have strange side-effects that make it very difficult to troubleshoot, this feature is optional and disabled by default in daemonocle via the close_open_files option.
Detailed Usage
The daemonocle.Daemon class is the main class for creating a daemon using daemonocle. Here’s the constructor signature for the class:
class daemonocle.Daemon(
name=None, worker=None, detach=True,
pid_file=None, work_dir='/', stdout_file=None, stderr_file=None, chroot_dir=None,
uid=None, gid=None, umask=0o22, close_open_files=False,
shutdown_callback=None, stop_timeout=10)
And here are descriptions of all the arguments:
- name
The name of your program to use in output messages. Default: os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
- worker
The function that does all the work for your daemon.
- detach
Whether or not to detach from the terminal and go into the background. See Non-Detached Mode for more details. Default: True
- pid_file
The path to a PID file to use. It’s not required to use a PID file, but if you don’t, you won’t be able to use all the features you might expect. Make sure the user your daemon is running as has permission to write to the directory this file is in.
- work_dir
The path to a directory to change to when the daemon starts. Note that a file system cannot be unmounted if a process has its working directory on that file system. So if you change the default, be careful about what you change it to. Default: "/"
- stdout_file
If provided when detach=True, the STDOUT stream will be redirected (appended) to the file at the given path. In non-detached mode, this argument is ignored.
New in version 1.1.0.
- stderr_file
If provided when detach=True, the STDERR stream will be redirected (appended) to the file at the given path. In non-detached mode, this argument is ignored.
New in version 1.1.0.
- chroot_dir
The path to a directory to set as the effective root directory when the daemon starts. The default is not to do anything.
- uid
The user ID to switch to when the daemon starts. The default is to not switch users.
- gid
The group ID to switch to when the daemon starts. The default is to not switch groups.
- umask
The file creation mask (“umask”) for the process. Default: 0o022
- close_open_files
Whether or not to close all open files when the daemon detaches. Default: False
- shutdown_callback
This will get called anytime the daemon is shutting down. It should take a message and a code argument. The message is a human readable message that explains why the daemon is shutting down. It might useful to log this message. The code is the exit code with which it intends to exit. See Shutdown Callback for more details.
- stop_timeout
Number of seconds to wait for the daemon to stop before throwing an error. Default: 10
Actions
The default actions are start, stop, restart, and status. You can get a list of available actions using the daemonocle.Daemon.list_actions() method. The recommended way to call an action is using the daemonocle.Daemon.do_action(action) method. The string name of an action is the same as the method name except with dashes in place of underscores.
If you want to create your own actions, simply subclass daemonocle.Daemon and add the @daemonocle.expose_action decorator to your action method, and that’s it.
Here’s an example:
import daemonocle
class MyDaemon(daemonocle.Daemon):
@daemonocle.expose_action
def full_status(self):
"""Get more detailed status of the daemon."""
pass
Then, if you did the basic daemon.do_action(sys.argv[1]) like in all the examples above, you can call your action with a command like python example.py full-status.
Integration with click
daemonocle also provides an integration with click, the “Command Line Interface Creation Kit”. The integration is in the form of a custom command class daemonocle.cli.DaemonCLI that you can use in conjunction with the @click.command() decorator to automatically generate a command line interface with subcommands for all your actions. It also automatically daemonizes the decorated function. The decorated function becomes the worker, and the actions are automatically mapped from click to daemonocle.
Here’s an example:
import time
import click
from daemonocle.cli import DaemonCLI
@click.command(cls=DaemonCLI, daemon_params={'pid_file': '/var/run/example.pid'})
def main():
"""This is my awesome daemon. It pretends to do work in the background."""
while True:
time.sleep(10)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
Here are all the help pages for the default actions:
user@host:~$ python example.py --help Usage: example.py [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]... This is my awesome daemon. It pretends to do work in the background. Options: --help Show this message and exit. Commands: start Start the daemon. stop Stop the daemon. restart Stop then start the daemon. status Get the status of the daemon. user@host:~$ python example.py start --help Usage: example.py start [OPTIONS] Start the daemon. Options: --debug Do NOT detach and run in the background. --help Show this message and exit. user@host:~$ python example.py stop --help Usage: example.py stop [OPTIONS] Stop the daemon. Options: --timeout INTEGER Number of seconds to wait for the daemon to stop. Overrides "stop_timeout" from daemon definition. --force Kill the daemon uncleanly if the timeout is reached. --help Show this message and exit. user@host:~$ python example.py restart --help Usage: example.py restart [OPTIONS] Stop then start the daemon. Options: --timeout INTEGER Number of seconds to wait for the daemon to stop. Overrides "stop_timeout" from daemon definition. --force Kill the daemon forcefully after the timeout. --debug Do NOT detach and run in the background. --help Show this message and exit. user@host:~$ python example.py status --help Usage: example.py status [OPTIONS] Get the status of the daemon. Options: --json Show the status in JSON format. --fields TEXT Comma-separated list of process info fields to display. --help Show this message and exit.
The daemonocle.cli.DaemonCLI class also accepts a daemon_class argument that can be a subclass of daemonocle.Daemon. It will use your custom class, automatically create subcommands for any custom actions you’ve defined, and use the docstrings of the action methods as the help text just like click usually does.
This integration is entirely optional. daemonocle doesn’t enforce any sort of argument parsing. You can use argparse, optparse, or just plain sys.argv if you want.
Starting with version 1.1.0, you can also use a couple different shorter ways of invoking the CLI.
Like this:
from daemonocle.cli import cli
@cli(pid_file='/var/run/example.pid')
def main():
"""Do stuff"""
...
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
Or like this:
from daemonocle import Daemon
def main():
"""Do stuff"""
...
if __name__ == '__main__':
daemon = Daemon(worker=main, pid_file='/var/run/example.pid')
daemon.cli()
The above two examples are equivalent. Use whichever way works best for you.
Bugs, Requests, Questions, etc.
Please create an issue on GitHub.
Release History
v1.2.0 (2021-02-15)
Dropped support for Python 2.7 and 3.5 (only >= 3.6 is now supported)
Deprecated shutdown_callback argument in favor of new hooks system. Replace shutdown_callback=func with hooks={'shutdown': func}.
Added 'start' hook that gets called before attempting to start the daemon. This can be useful for checking things or setting things up.
Improvements to some undocumented experimental features. :)
v1.1.1 (2020-12-31)
The stop action will now clean up the PID file if the worker didn’t do it for some reason.
A few bug fixes to some undocumented experimental features. :)
v1.1.0 (2020-12-16)
Official support for Python 3.9
Added back official support for Python 3.5
Increased test coverage to over 95%.
All tests now pass on macOS (Intel) and the GitHub Actions build now runs on macOS 10.15 in addition to Ubuntu.
Fixed the close_open_files option to be much more reliable and consistent across different platforms.
Fixed a race condition with the self-reload functionality where the PID file of the parent process was being deleted while the child process was trying to read it.
Added stdout_file and stderr_file arguments to Daemon. If these arguments are provided when detach=True, STDOUT and STDERR will be redirected to these files. In non-detached mode, these arguments are ignored.
When chrootdir is given, all other paths are now always considered relative to the chroot directory, even with a leading slash.
Actions can now take arbitrary arguments, and (on Python 3) CLI options are auto-generated from the function signature. The auto-generated CLI options work best when your action’s function signature contains type annotations and default values where applicable.
Added timeout and force arguments to the built-in stop action, accessible from the CLI as --timeout and --force.
Added json and fields arguments to the built-in status action, accessible from the CLI as --json and --fields.
Added colored output when the output stream is attached to a terminal.
Fixed a bug where the daemon wouldn’t respond properly to docker stop when running in a docker container.
The worker function can now be a method called worker on a Daemon subclass.
Some more secret experimental stuff. :)
v1.0.2 (2020-07-12)
Official support for Python 2.7, 3.6, 3.7, and 3.8.
Fixed bug checking if a stream is a socket on Python 3.8.
Closing open files is now more efficient on systems with a very high limit on the number of open files.
Improved detection of running inside a container.
v1.0.1 (2016-04-17)
No changes in this release. Bumped version only to re-upload to PyPI.
v1.0.0 (2016-04-17)
Added official support for Python 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, and 3.5.
Added a comprehensive suite of unit tests with over 90% code coverage.
Dependencies (click and psutil) are no longer pinned to specific versions.
Fixed bug with atexit handlers not being called in intermediate processes.
Fixed bug when PID file is a relative path.
Fixed bug when STDIN doesn’t have a file descriptor number.
Fixed bug when running in non-detached mode in a Docker container.
A TTY is no longer checked for when deciding how to run in non-detached mode. The behavior was inconsistent across different platforms.
Fixed bug when a process stopped before having chance to check if it stopped.
Fixed bug where an exception could be raised if a PID file is already gone when trying to remove it.
Subdirectories created for PID files now respect the umask setting.
The pre-umask mode for PID files is now 0o666 instead of 0o777, which will result in a default mode of 0o644 instead of 0o755 when using the default umask of 0o22.
v0.8 (2014-08-01)
Upgraded click to version 2.5.
Status action now returns exit code 1 if the daemon is not running.
v0.7 (2014-06-23)
Fixed bug that was causing an empty PID file on Python 3.
Upgraded click to version 2.1.
Open file discriptors are no longer closed by default. This functionality is now optional via the close_open_files argument to Daemon().
Added is_worker argument to DaemonCLI() as well as the pass_daemon decorator.
v0.6 (2014-06-10)
Upgraded click to version 2.0.
v0.5 (2014-06-09)
Fixed literal octal formatting to work with Python 3.
v0.4 (2014-05-19)
Fixed bug with uptime calculation in status action.
Upgraded click to version 0.7.
v0.3 (2014-05-14)
Reorganized package and cleaned up code.
v0.2 (2014-05-12)
Renamed Daemon.get_actions() to Daemon.list_actions().
Improvements to documentation.
Fixed bug with non-detached mode when parent is in the same process group.
v0.1 (2014-05-11)
Initial release.
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