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Re: [PATCH] write the daemon's pid to a file.el


From: John Darrington
Subject: Re: [PATCH] write the daemon's pid to a file.el
Date: Sun, 8 Dec 2013 17:06:36 +0100
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15)

Debian uses a script and a program start-stop-daemon.  FRom the man page:

       Note: unless --pidfile is specified, start-stop-daemon behaves  similar  
to  killall(1).   start-stop-daemon  will  scan  the
       process  table  looking  for any processes which match the process name, 
uid, and/or gid (if specified). Any matching process
       will prevent --start from starting the daemon. All matching processes 
will be sent the TERM signal (or the one specified  via
       --signal  or --retry) if --stop is specified. For daemons which have 
long-lived children which need to live through a --stop,
       you must specify a pidfile.

Of course, one can get the pid by doing

 guix-daemon --blah-blah & 
 pid=$!

But the problem here is that the & means you never know when the daemon has 
actually started,
which leads to race conditions.  Again, there are tricks to work around that, 
but having the daemon 
write its own pid makes it a lot easier.

J'

On Sun, Dec 08, 2013 at 04:35:40PM +0100, Ludovic Courtès wrote:
     John Darrington <address@hidden> skribis:
     
     > I don't know what you will think of this patch.  But I found that it 
makes 
     > running guix under debian a whole lot easier.  I suspect the same will be
     > true for many other OSes too.
     
     How does it help exactly?  On GNU, it’s started by dmd, which knows its 
PID.
     I’d expect it to be the same with other init systems, no?
     
     Thanks,
     Ludo’.

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