bionic (1) supervisorctl.1.gz

Provided by: supervisor_3.3.1-1.1_all bug

NAME

       supervisorctl - supervisorctl 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

   Supervisor Components
       supervisorctl
          The  command-line  client  piece  of  the supervisor is named supervisorctl.  It provides a shell-like
          interface to the features provided  by  supervisord.   From  supervisorctl,  a  user  can  connect  to
          different  supervisord  processes,  get  status  on  the  subprocesses  controlled  by, stop and start
          subprocesses of, and get lists of running processes of a supervisord.

          The command-line client talks to the server across a UNIX domain socket or an internet  (TCP)  socket.
          The  server  can  assert that the user of a client should present authentication credentials before it
          allows him to perform commands.  The client process typically uses the same configuration file as  the
          server but any configuration file with a [supervisorctl] section in it will work.

   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.

   supervisorctl Command-Line Options
       -c, --configuration
              Configuration file path (default /etc/supervisord.conf)

       -h, --help
              Print usage message and exit

       -i, --interactive
              Start an interactive shell after executing commands

       -s,--serverurl URL
              URL on which supervisord server is listening (default "http://localhost:9001").

       -u, --username
              Username to use for authentication with server

       -p, --password
              Password to use for authentication with server

       -r, --history-file
              Keep a readline history (if readline is available)

       action [arguments]

       Actions  are commands like "tail" or "stop".  If -i is specified or no action is specified on the command
       line, a "shell" interpreting actions typed interactively is started.  Use the action "help" to  find  out
       about available actions.

   Running supervisorctl
       To  start  supervisorctl,  run  $BINDIR/supervisorctl.   A shell will be presented that will allow you to
       control the processes that are currently managed by supervisord.   Type  "help"  at  the  prompt  to  get
       information about the supported commands.

       The  supervisorctl  executable may be invoked with "one time" commands when invoked with arguments from a
       command line.  An example: supervisorctl stop all.  If arguments are present on the command-line, it will
       prevent  the  interactive  shell  from  being  invoked.   Instead,  the  command  will  be  executed  and
       supervisorctl will exit.

       If supervisorctl is invoked in interactive mode against a supervisord that requires  authentication,  you
       will be asked for authentication credentials.

   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.

       2004-2015, Agendaless Consulting and Contributors