Provided by: python3-cherrypy3_18.6.1-4_all bug

NAME

       cherryd - Starts the CherryPy HTTP server as a daemon

SYNOPSIS

       cherryd  [-d]  [-f  | -s] [-e ENV_NAME] [-p PIDFILE_PATH] [-P DIRPATH] [-c CONFIG_FILE] -i
       MODULE_NAME

DESCRIPTION

       cherryd is a Python script which starts the CherryPy webserver as a daemon.

OPTIONS

       -c CONFIG_FILE, --config=CONFIG_FILE
              Specifies a config file which is to be read and merged into the CherryPy  site-wide
              config  dict.   This  option may be specified multiple times.  For each CONFIG_FILE
              specified, cherryd will perform cherrypy.config.update().

       -d     Run the server as a daemon.

       -e ENV_NAME, --environment=ENV_NAME
              Specifies the name of an environment to be applied.  An environment is a canned set
              of  configuration  entries.   See  ENVIRONMENTS  below  for  a list of the built-in
              environments.

       -f     Start a fastcgi server instead of the default HTTP server.

       -s     Start a scgi server instead of the default HTTP server.

       -i MODULE_NAME, --import=MODULE_NAME
              Specifies a module to import.  This option may be specified  multiple  times.   For
              each  MODULE_NAME  specified, cherryd will import the module.  This is how you tell
              cherryd to run your application's startup code.  For all practical purposes, -i  is
              not optional; you will always need to specify at least one module.

       -p PIDFILE_PATH, --pidfile=PIDFILE_PATH
              Store the process id in PIDFILE_PATH.

       -P DIRPATH, --Path DIRPATH
              Specifies a directory to be inserted at the head of sys.path.  DIRPATH should be an
              absolute path.  This option may be specified multiple times.  cherryd  inserts  all
              the specified DIRPATHs into sys.path before it attempts to import modules specified
              with -i.

       For a terse summary of the options, run cherryd --help.

EXAMPLES

       A site-wide configuration file site.conf:

          [global]
          server.socket_host = "0.0.0.0"
          server.socket_port = 8008
          engine.autoreload.on = False

       The application startup code in startup.py:

          import cherrypy
          import my_controller
          cherrypy.log.error_file = '/var/tmp/myapp-error.log'
          cherrypy.log.access_file = '/var/tmp/myapp-access.log'
          config_root = { 'tools.encode.encoding' : 'utf-8', }
          app_conf = { '/' : config_root }
          cherrypy.tree.mount(my_controller.Root(), script_name='', config=app_conf)

       A corresponding cherryd command line:

          cherryd -d -c site.conf -i startup -p /var/log/cherrypy/my_app.pid

DROPPING PRIVILEGES

       If you want to serve your web application on TCP port 80 (or any port  lower  than  1024),
       the  CherryPy  HTTP server needs to start as root in order to bind to the port.  Running a
       web application as root is reckless, so the application should drop privileges  from  root
       to some other user and group.  The application must do this itself, as cherryd does not do
       it for you.

       To drop  privileges,  put  the  following  lines  into  your  startup  code,  substituting
       appropriate values for umask, uid and gid:

          from cherrypy.process.plugins import DropPrivileges
          DropPrivileges(cherrypy.engine, umask=022, uid='nobody', gid='nogroup').subscribe()

       Note  that  the  values for uid and gid may be either user and group names, or uid and gid
       integers.

       Note that you must disable the engine Autoreload plugin, because the way Autoreload  works
       is  by  exec()ing  a  new instance of the running process, replacing the current instance.
       Since root privileges are already dropped, the new process  instance  will  fail  when  it
       tries to perform a privileged operation such as binding to a low-numbered TCP port.

ENVIRONMENTS

       These are the built-in environment configurations:

   staging
          'engine.autoreload.on': False,
          'checker.on': False,
          'tools.log_headers.on': False,
          'request.show_tracebacks': False,
          'request.show_mismatched_params': False,

   production
          'engine.autoreload_on': False,
          'checker.on': False,
          'tools.log_headers.on': False,
          'request.show_tracebacks': False,
          'request.show_mismatched_params': False,
          'log.screen': False,

   embedded
          # For use with CherryPy embedded in another deployment stack, e.g. Apache mod_wsgi.
          'engine.autoreload_on': False,
          'checker.on': False,
          'tools.log_headers.on': False,
          'request.show_tracebacks': False,
          'request.show_mismatched_params': False,
          'log.screen': False,
          'engine.SIGHUP': None,
          'engine.SIGTERM': None,

BUGS

       cherryd  should probably accept command-line options --uid, --gid, and --umask, and handle
       dropping privileges itself.

AUTHOR

       fumanchu

       cherrypy.org

COPYRIGHT

       This man page is placed in the public domain