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From: | David Breakey |
Subject: | Re: Monitor processes in the foreground? |
Date: | Sat, 07 Sep 2013 10:42:48 -0600 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:17.0) Gecko/20130803 Thunderbird/17.0.8 |
Except for obvious exceptions (word
processors, etc) all processes support running as a daemon,
whether they "want" to or not. The only concern is if the process
in question expects interaction at the console, in which
case other arrangements have to be made to handle I/O. "Daemon" is
more a contextual meaning, rather than functional.
I suspect you're getting confused with processes that support "self-detaching" from the current process, so you don't have to explicitly background them. If you're running on Debian, or any Debian-derived distro, take a look at /etc/init.d/skeleton for a template of a wrapper script that handles pushing something into the background, even when it doesn't "support" it. This isn't perfect, by any means, but the number of processes that will confound it are reasonably small (a good example of one that won't work as expected is one that launches sub-processes, then kills itself, leaving the spawned processes to handle the actual work, but these seem to be pretty rare). Sometimes, you need to write a pretty heavily customized wrapper script, which might be more work than it's worth, but I've rarely had to so far (either someone's done it already, or the skeleton is pretty trivially adaptable). Once you wrap your process in this, then Monit can handle it without problems (well, so long as the PID is properly captured). And even if you can't properly capture the PID, use Monit's pattern matching by process name, instead; not as good as using the PID, but should work well in most cases. On 09/06/2013 10:35 PM, address@hidden wrote:
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