Provided by: supervisor_3.2.0-2ubuntu0.2_all bug

NAME

       supervisord - supervisord Documentation

       Supervisor is a client/server system that allows its users to monitor and control a number
       of processes on UNIX-like operating systems.

       It shares some of the same goals of programs like launchd, daemontools, and runit.  Unlike
       some  of these programs, it is not meant to be run as a substitute for init as "process id
       1". Instead it is meant to be used  to  control  processes  related  to  a  project  or  a
       customer, and is meant to start like any other program at boot time.

DOCUMENTATION

   supervisord
       The server piece of supervisor is named supervisord.  It is responsible for starting child
       programs at its own invocation, responding to commands from clients, restarting crashed or
       exited subprocesseses, logging its subprocess stdout and stderr output, and generating and
       handling "events" corresponding to points in subprocess lifetimes.

       The  server  process  uses  a  configuration  file.   This   is   typically   located   in
       /etc/supervisord.conf.   This configuration file is a "Windows-INI" style config file.  It
       is important to keep this file secure via proper filesystem  permissions  because  it  may
       contain unencrypted usernames and passwords.

   Running Supervisor
       This  section  makes  reference to a BINDIR when explaining how to run the supervisord and
       supervisorctl commands.  This is the "bindir" directory that your Python installation  has
       been  configured  with.   For  example,  for  an  installation  of  Python  installed  via
       ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/py; make; make install, BINDIR would be /usr/local/py/bin.
       Python  interpreters on different platforms use a different BINDIR.  Look at the output of
       setup.py install if you can't figure out where yours is.

   Adding a Program
       Before supervisord will do anything useful for you,  you'll  need  to  add  at  least  one
       program  section  to its configuration.  The program section will define a program that is
       run and managed when you invoke the supervisord command.  To add a program, you'll need to
       edit the supervisord.conf file.

       One  of  the simplest possible programs to run is the UNIX cat program.  A program section
       that will run cat when the supervisord process starts up is shown below.

          [program:foo]
          command=/bin/cat

       This stanza may be cut and pasted into the supervisord.conf file.  This  is  the  simplest
       possible  program  configuration,  because it only names a command.  Program configuration
       sections  have  many  other  configuration  options  which   aren't   shown   here.    See
       programx_section for more information.

   Running supervisord
       To  start  supervisord,  run  $BINDIR/supervisord.   The  resulting process will daemonize
       itself and detach from the terminal.  It keeps an operations log at $CWD/supervisor.log by
       default.

       You  may  start the supervisord executable in the foreground by passing the -n flag on its
       command line.  This is useful to debug startup problems.

       WARNING:
          When supervisord starts up, it will  search  for  its  configuration  file  in  default
          locations  including  the current working directory.  If you are security-conscious you
          will probably want to specify a "-c" argument after the supervisord command  specifying
          an  absolute path to a configuration file to ensure that someone doesn't trick you into
          running supervisor from within a directory that contains a rogue supervisord.conf file.
          A warning is emitted when supervisor is started as root without this -c argument.

       To  change  the  set of programs controlled by supervisord, edit the supervisord.conf file
       and kill -HUP or otherwise restart the supervisord process.  This file has several example
       program definitions.

       The  supervisord  command accepts a number of command-line options.  Each of these command
       line options overrides any equivalent value in the configuration file.

   supervisord Command-Line Options
       -c FILE, --configuration=FILE
              The path to a supervisord configuration file.

       -n, --nodaemon
              Run supervisord in the foreground.

       -h, --help
              Show supervisord command help.

       -u USER, --user=USER
              UNIX username or numeric user id.  If supervisord is  started  as  the  root  user,
              setuid to this user as soon as possible during startup.

       -m OCTAL, --umask=OCTAL
              Octal  number  (e.g. 022) representing the umask that should be used by supervisord
              after it starts.

       -d PATH, --directory=PATH
              When supervisord is run as a daemon, cd to this directory before daemonizing.

       -l FILE, --logfile=FILE
              Filename path to use as the supervisord activity log.

       -y BYTES, --logfile_maxbytes=BYTES
              Max size of the supervisord activity log file before a rotation occurs.  The  value
              is  suffix-multiplied,  e.g  "1"  is  one  byte,  "1MB"  is  1 megabyte, "1GB" is 1
              gigabyte.

       -y NUM, --logfile_backups=NUM
              Number of backup copies of the supervisord  activity  log  to  keep  around.   Each
              logfile will be of size logfile_maxbytes.

       -e LEVEL, --loglevel=LEVEL
              The  logging  level  at  which  supervisor should write to the activity log.  Valid
              levels are trace, debug, info, warn, error, and critical.

       -j FILE, --pidfile=FILE
              The filename to which supervisord should write its pid file.

       -i STRING, --identifier=STRING
              Arbitrary string identifier exposed by various client  UIs  for  this  instance  of
              supervisor.

       -q PATH, --childlogdir=PATH
              A  path to a directory (it must already exist) where supervisor will write its AUTO
              -mode child process logs.

       -k, --nocleanup
              Prevent supervisord from performing cleanup (removal of old AUTO process log files)
              at startup.

       -a NUM, --minfds=NUM
              The  minimum  number  of file descriptors that must be available to the supervisord
              process before it will start successfully.

       -t, --strip_ansi
              Strip ANSI escape sequences from all child log process.

       -v, --version
              Print the supervisord version number out to stdout and exit.

       --profile_options=LIST
              Comma-separated options list for profiling.  Causes  supervisord  to  run  under  a
              profiler,  and output results based on the options, which is a comma-separated list
              of the following: cumulative, calls, callers.  E.g. cumulative,callers.

       --minprocs=NUM
              The minimum number of OS process slots that must be available  to  the  supervisord
              process before it will start successfully.

   Signals
       The  supervisord  program  may  be  sent signals which cause it to perform certain actions
       while it's running.

       You can send any of these signals to the single supervisord process id.  This  process  id
       can be found in the file represented by the pidfile parameter in the [supervisord] section
       of the configuration file (by default it's $CWD/supervisord.pid).

   Signal Handlers
       SIGTERM
          supervisord and all its subprocesses will shut down.  This may take several seconds.

       SIGINT
          supervisord and all its subprocesses will shut down.  This may take several seconds.

       SIGQUIT
          supervisord and all its subprocesses will shut down.  This may take several seconds.

       SIGHUP
          supervisord will stop all processes, reload the configuration  from  the  first  config
          file it finds, and restart all processes.

       SIGUSR2
          supervisord will close and reopen the main activity log and all child log files.

   Runtime Security
       The developers have done their best to assure that use of a supervisord process running as
       root cannot lead to unintended privilege escalation.  But caveat  emptor.   Supervisor  is
       not  as  paranoid  as  something  like DJ Bernstein's daemontools, inasmuch as supervisord
       allows for arbitrary path specifications in its configuration file to which  data  may  be
       written.   Allowing  arbitrary  path  selections  can  create vulnerabilities from symlink
       attacks.  Be careful when  specifying  paths  in  your  configuration.   Ensure  that  the
       supervisord configuration file cannot be read from or written to by unprivileged users and
       that all files installed by the supervisor package have "sane" file permission  protection
       settings.   Additionally, ensure that your PYTHONPATH is sane and that all Python standard
       library files have adequate file permission protections.

   Running supervisord automatically on startup
       If you are using a distribution-packaged version  of  Supervisor,  it  should  already  be
       integrated into the service management infrastructure of your distribution.

       There    are    user-contributed    scripts    for    various    operating   systems   at:
       https://github.com/Supervisor/initscripts

       There are some answers at Serverfault in case you get stuck: How  to  automatically  start
       supervisord on Linux (Ubuntu)

Subprocesses

       supervisord's  primary  purpose  is  to  create  and manage processes based on data in its
       configuration file.  It does this by creating subprocesses.  Each  subprocess  spawned  by
       supervisor  is managed for the entirety of its lifetime by supervisord (supervisord is the
       parent process of each process it creates).  When a child dies, supervisor is notified  of
       its death via the SIGCHLD signal, and it performs the appropriate operation.

   Nondaemonizing of Subprocesses
       Programs  meant to be run under supervisor should not daemonize themselves.  Instead, they
       should run in the foreground.  They should not detach from the terminal  from  which  they
       are started.

       The easiest way to tell if a program will run in the foreground is to run the command that
       invokes the program from a shell prompt.  If it gives you control of  the  terminal  back,
       but continues running, it's daemonizing itself and that will almost certainly be the wrong
       way to run it under supervisor.  You want to run a command that essentially  requires  you
       to  press Ctrl-C to get control of the terminal back.  If it gives you a shell prompt back
       after running it without needing to press Ctrl-C, it's not useful under  supervisor.   All
       programs  have options to be run in the foreground but there's no "standard way" to do it;
       you'll need to read the documentation for each program.

       Below are configuration  file  examples  that  are  known  to  start  common  programs  in
       "foreground" mode under Supervisor.

   Examples of Program Configurations
       Here are some "real world" program configuration examples:

   Apache 2.2.6
          [program:apache2]
          command=/path/to/httpd -c "ErrorLog /dev/stdout" -DFOREGROUND
          redirect_stderr=true

   Two Zope 2.X instances and one ZEO server
          [program:zeo]
          command=/path/to/runzeo
          priority=1

          [program:zope1]
          command=/path/to/instance/home/bin/runzope
          priority=2
          redirect_stderr=true

          [program:zope2]
          command=/path/to/another/instance/home/bin/runzope
          priority=2
          redirect_stderr=true

   Postgres 8.X
          [program:postgres]
          command=/path/to/postmaster
          ; we use the "fast" shutdown signal SIGINT
          stopsignal=INT
          redirect_stderr=true

   OpenLDAP slapd
          [program:slapd]
          command=/path/to/slapd -f /path/to/slapd.conf -h ldap://0.0.0.0:8888
          redirect_stderr=true

   Other Examples
       Other examples of shell scripts that could be used to start services under supervisord can
       be found at http://thedjbway.b0llix.net/services.html.  These examples  are  actually  for
       daemontools but the premise is the same for supervisor.

       Another collection of recipes for starting various programs in the foreground is available
       from http://smarden.org/runit/runscripts.html.

   pidproxy Program
       Some processes (like mysqld) ignore signals sent to the actual process which is spawned by
       supervisord.   Instead,  a  "special" thread/process is created by these kinds of programs
       which is responsible for handling signals.  This is problematic  because  supervisord  can
       only  kill a process which it creates itself.  If a process created by supervisord creates
       its own child processes, supervisord cannot kill them.

       Fortunately, these types of programs  typically  write  a  "pidfile"  which  contains  the
       "special" process' PID, and is meant to be read and used in order to kill the process.  As
       a workaround for this case, a special pidproxy program can handle startup of  these  kinds
       of  processes.   The  pidproxy program is a small shim that starts a process, and upon the
       receipt of a signal, sends the signal  to  the  pid  provided  in  a  pidfile.   A  sample
       configuration program entry for a pidproxy-enabled program is provided below.

          [program:mysql]
          command=/path/to/pidproxy /path/to/pidfile /path/to/mysqld_safe

       The pidproxy program is put into your configuration's $BINDIR when supervisor is installed
       (it is a "console script").

   Subprocess Environment
       Subprocesses will inherit the environment of the  shell  used  to  start  the  supervisord
       program.   Several  environment variables will be set by supervisord itself in the child's
       environment also, including SUPERVISOR_ENABLED (a flag indicating  the  process  is  under
       supervisor  control),  SUPERVISOR_PROCESS_NAME (the config-file-specified process name for
       this process) and SUPERVISOR_GROUP_NAME (the config-file-specified process group name  for
       the child process).

       These  environment  variables  may  be  overridden within the [supervisord] section config
       option named environment (applies to all subprocesses)  or  within  the  per-  [program:x]
       section  environment  config  option  (applies only to the subprocess specified within the
       [program:x] section).  These "environment" settings are additive.  In  other  words,  each
       subprocess' environment will consist of:
          The environment variables set within the shell used to start supervisord...

          ... added-to/overridden-by ...

          ... the environment variables set within the environment global
                     config option ...

                 ... added-to/overridden-by ...

                 ... supervisor-specific environment variables
                        (SUPERVISOR_ENABLED, SUPERVISOR_PROCESS_NAME, SUPERVISOR_GROUP_NAME) ..

                 ... added-to/overridden-by ...

                 ... the environment variables set within the per-process
                        "environment" config option.

       No  shell  is  executed by supervisord when it runs a subprocess, so environment variables
       such as USER, PATH, HOME, SHELL, LOGNAME, etc. are not  changed  from  their  defaults  or
       otherwise  reassigned.   This  is  particularly  important  to note when you are running a
       program from a supervisord run as root with a user= stanza in the  configuration.   Unlike
       cron,  supervisord  does  not  attempt  to  divine  and override "fundamental" environment
       variables like USER, PATH, HOME, and LOGNAME when it performs a setuid to the user defined
       within  the  user=  program config option.  If you need to set environment variables for a
       particular program that might otherwise be set by a  shell  invocation  for  a  particular
       user, you must do it explicitly within the environment= program config option.  An example
       of setting these environment variables is as below.

          [program:apache2]
          command=/home/chrism/bin/httpd -c "ErrorLog /dev/stdout" -DFOREGROUND
          user=chrism
          environment=HOME="/home/chrism",USER="chrism"

   Process States
       A process controlled by supervisord will be in one of the below states at any given  time.
       You may see these state names in various user interface elements in clients.

       STOPPED (0)
          The process has been stopped due to a stop request or has never been started.

       STARTING (10)
          The process is starting due to a start request.

       RUNNING (20)
          The process is running.

       BACKOFF (30)
          The  process  entered the STARTING state but subsequently exited too quickly to move to
          the RUNNING state.

       STOPPING (40)
          The process is stopping due to a stop request.

       EXITED (100)
          The process exited from the RUNNING state (expectedly or unexpectedly).

       FATAL (200)
          The process could not be started successfully.

       UNKNOWN (1000)
          The process is in an unknown state (supervisord programming error).

       Each process run under supervisor progresses through these states  as  per  the  following
       directed graph.
         [image:   Subprocess   State  Transition  Graph]  [image]  Subprocess  State  Transition
         Graph.UNINDENT

         A process is in the STOPPED state if it has been stopped adminstratively or  if  it  has
         never been started.

         When  an  autorestarting  process  is  in  the  BACKOFF  state, it will be automatically
         restarted by supervisord.  It will switch between STARTING and BACKOFF states  until  it
         becomes  evident  that  it  cannot  be  started  because  the number of startretries has
         exceeded the maximum, at which point it will transition to the FATAL state.  Each  start
         retry will take progressively more time.

         When a process is in the EXITED state, it will automatically restart:

       • never if its autorestart parameter is set to false.

       • unconditionally if its autorestart parameter is set to true.

       • conditionally  if  its autorestart parameter is set to unexpected.  If it exited with an
         exit  code  that  doesn't  match  one  of  the  exit  codes  defined  in  the  exitcodes
         configuration parameter for the process, it will be restarted.

       A process automatically transitions from EXITED to RUNNING as a result of being configured
       to autorestart conditionally  or  unconditionally.   The  number  of  transitions  between
       RUNNING  and  EXITED  is  not limited in any way: it is possible to create a configuration
       that endlessly restarts an exited process.  This is a feature, not a bug.

       An autorestarted process will never be automatically restarted if it ends up in the  FATAL
       state (it must be manually restarted from this state).

       A process transitions into the STOPPING state via an administrative stop request, and will
       then end up in the STOPPED state.

       A process that cannot be stopped successfully will stay in  the  STOPPING  state  forever.
       This  situation  should  never  be reached during normal operations as it implies that the
       process did not respond to a final SIGKILL signal sent  to  it  by  supervisor,  which  is
       "impossible" under UNIX.

       State transitions which always require user action to invoke are these:

       FATAL   -> STARTING

       RUNNING -> STOPPING

       State  transitions  which  typically,  but  not  always, require user action to invoke are
       these, with exceptions noted:

       STOPPED -> STARTING (except at supervisord startup if process is configured to autostart)

       EXITED -> STARTING (except if process is configured to autorestart)

       All other state transitions are managed by supervisord automatically.

   Glossary
       daemontools
              A process control system by D.J. Bernstein.

       launchd
              A process control system used by Apple as process 1 under Mac OS X.

       runit  A process control system.

       Superlance
              A package which provides various event  listener  implementations  that  plug  into
              Supervisor   which  can  help  monitor  process  memory  usage  and  crash  status:
              http://pypi.python.org/pypi/superlance.

       umask  Abbreviation of user mask: sets the file mode creation mask of the current process.
              See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umask.

AUTHOR

       This  man  page  was  created by Orestis Ioannou <orestis@oioannou.com> using the official
       documentation.

COPYRIGHT

       2004-2015, Agendaless Consulting and Contributors