I have an opensplice publisher on Ubuntu 20.04 that is started via systemd.
If the publisher starts via systemd then the data is not pubished, but also no errors are reported or present in the opensplice log files.
The publisher works if I run it from a command line or if I stop and restart the service.
The QoS are the same for the publisher and subscriber.
The publisher and subscriber applications are running on different machines.
There are no other participants on the network. All the machines are rebooted and the order of reboot does not change the observed behaviour.
The systemd service is:
[Unit]
Description=Publisher Process
Documentation=
After=network.target
StartLimitIntervalSec=0
[Service]
Type=simple
WorkingDirectory=/opt/publisher/bin
ExecStart=/opt/publisher/bin/publisher.sh
Restart=always
RestartSec=2
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
The publisher.sh is:
#!/bin/bash
cd /opt/publisher/bin
source bashrc_local
# We just keep running the application (in case of a crash)
while true; do
./publisher
sleep 15
done
I have a work around that feels a little bit naff.
#!/bin/bash
cd /opt/publisher/bin
source bashrc_local
timeout 30 ./remote_processor
killall remote_processor
# We just keep running the application (in case of a crash)
while true; do
./publisher
sleep 15
done
Any ideas on how I can remove my work around?
Edit 16 Sept 22
The issue appears to be systemd start order and dependencies as I have run into the same issue with a program publishing data via UDP which is not using DDS.
Changing the dependencies so the services are started just before the user login does not help.
check your environment variables as systemd will not run with the same environment as your bash console
in particular have you set the OSPL_URI variable to point at the config?
if using the commercial version, OSPL_HOME and ADLINK_LICENSE will also need to be set
Does the PATH variable include your OSPL shared libraries?
These are all setup by running the $OSPL_HOME\release.com script in your bash session
I tend to manually add the required ones to the service file
e.g.
Environment=OSPL_URI=file:///opt/ospl.xml
Related
I have a strange situation with a web service hosted on a debian instance, that sometimes stops, and does not restart automatically. However, when SSH-ing into the machine, the service seems to restart automatically.
I originally wanted the service to always be up and restart, could you help me figure out what's wrong ? I may have misunderstood how systemctl --user services are meant to run.
The service in question is a Rails application running with passenger standalone, but I believe the problem might just be a misconfiguration in the systemd file.
My systemd file
# .config/systemd/user/my_service.service
[Unit]
Description=passenger with rails server for my_service (production)
After=syslog.target network.target
[Service]
Type=forking
PrivateTmp=yes
WorkingDirectory=/websites/xxx/current
PIDFile=/websites/xxx/shared/tmp/pids/passenger.8080.pid
ExecStart=/home/outscale/.asdf/shims/bundle exec passenger start /websites/xxx/current
ExecStop=/home/outscale/.asdf/shims/bundle exec passenger stop /websites/xxx/current
MemoryAccounting=true
MemoryLimit=3584M
Restart=always
RestartSec=1
TimeoutStopSec=30
KillMode=mixed
StandardInput=null
SyslogIdentifier=%p
# Environment
Environment="RAILS_ENV=production"
Environment="NODE_ENV=production"
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
I have copied this installed the service using
systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl --user enable my_service
Was I meant to use something else, like systemctl --global enable unit ? I want my service to run with the "outscale" user installing the service (otherwise my version manager asdf does not work as expected)
I found the solution to my problem there. I had misunderstood the behavior of the --user flag (VS using the User= property in the service file)
I was running under debian 11 and as stated in the mentioned answer, my service would not necessarily shut down after logging out of ssh, but only at some point (not clear if it happened when my service crashed for the first time or some sort of garbage collection)
And the service would boot up again magically when SSHing in the instance as a reaction to a user login and starting all the services.
So the fix was to reimplement the services using User= and without the --user flag to make it a globally available service.
I have the following script:
whie true
do
#code
sleep 60
done
I then wanted to create a service to start the machine and launch this script as service:
created my.service at /etc/systemd/system/my.service
[Unit]
Description=my Script
[Service]
Type=forking
ExecStart=/bin/script.sh
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
problem occurs when i systemctl start my.service
it goes to while true loop and hang in there, how can i run this service and make it run in the background ?
According to systemd specification at link. Type=forking is not exactly correct kind of start-up in your case
If set to forking, it is expected that the process configured with
ExecStart= will call fork() as part of its start-up. The parent
process is expected to exit when start-up is complete and all
communication channels are set up. The child continues to run as the
main service process, and the service manager will consider the unit
started when the parent process exits. This is the behavior of
traditional UNIX services. If this setting is used, it is recommended
to also use the PIDFile= option, so that systemd can reliably identify
the main process of the service. systemd will proceed with starting
follow-up units as soon as the parent process exits.
The Type=simple can be correct one. You can try with it
If set to simple (the default if ExecStart= is specified but neither
Type= nor BusName= are), the service manager will consider the unit
started immediately after the main service process has been forked
off. It is expected that the process configured with ExecStart= is the
main process of the service. In this mode, if the process offers
functionality to other processes on the system, its communication
channels should be installed before the service is started up (e.g.
sockets set up by systemd, via socket activation), as the service
manager will immediately proceed starting follow-up units, right after
creating the main service process, and before executing the service's
binary. Note that this means systemctl start command lines for simple
services will report success even if the service's binary cannot be
invoked successfully (for example because the selected User= doesn't
exist, or the service binary is missing).
I'm using Ubuntu 18.04.4 LTS which uses systemd, but the squid package packaged with this version of Ubuntu is configured to start via init.d. It starts and runs via systemctl start squid.service if I start it manually after the system has booted.
However, I'm using a ZFS mount point ("/media") to store the cache data, and during the boot process squid is starting before this mount point is active. Consequently I'm getting the error "Failed to verify one of the swap directories". Full output of systemctl status squid is here
I'd like to tell systemd to wait until after media.mount has completed in the most minimally invasive way possible (e.g. without modifying the /etc/init.d/squid file that is maintained by the package). To that end I created the /etc/systemd/system/squid.service.d/override.conf file like so:
% cat /etc/systemd/system/squid.service.d/override.conf
[Unit]
Wants=network.target network-online.target nss-lookup.target media.mount
After=network.target network-online.target nss-lookup.target media.mount
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
But squid is still starting too early.
Is what I want to do possible? Or do I have to bite the bullet and define a native /etc/systemd/system/squid.service file and remove the /etc/init.d/squid init script?
I would like systemd to manage the tup monitor, so I wrote a service unit:
[Unit]
Description=Monitor source files for changes
[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart=/usr/bin/tup monitor -f
ExecStop=/usr/bin/tup stop
WorkingDirectory=/some/dir
StandardOutput=journal+console
StandardError=journal+console
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Whereas starting the monitor manually works, trying to do it with systemd fails with the following error:
setpgid: Operation not permitted
tup error: Unable to set process group for tup's subprocesses.
The error originates in this file and seems to be due to systemd not giving the process the capabilities it needs, so I went further:
[Unit]
Description=Monitor source files for changes
[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart=/usr/bin/tup monitor -f
ExecStop=/usr/bin/tup stop
CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_SETUID CAP_SETGID
AmbientCapabilities=CAP_SETUID CAP_SETGID
WorkingDirectory=/some/dir
StandardOutput=journal+console
StandardError=journal+console
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Still, it doesn't work.
How can I tell systemd to keep the permissions tup requires?
systemd does not restrict any permissions on services by default, so I don’t think that’s the problem. The setpgid(2) manpage mentions three possible conditions for EPERM, though:
An attempt was made to move a process into a process group in a different session, or to change the process group ID of one of the children of the calling process and the child was in a different session, or to change the process group ID of a session leader (setpgid(), setpgrp()).
I think the third one is the most likely cause of the error: tup probably expects to be run from a shell, in which case the shell would be the session leader and tup tries to establish its own process group, but systemd places each service in its own session as part of setting up a clean execution environment for the service (see also daemon(7)), so that step fails.
Unless you can somehow disable that step in tup (it doesn’t need to fork, either, or do a number of other things which systemd makes unnecessary), I think the only workaround would be an ugly hack:
ExecStart=/bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/tup monitor -f'
With this, the session leader will be the shell, not tup, so the setpgid should work again.
Try this
[Unit]
Description=Monitor source files for changes
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart=/usr/bin/tup monitor -f
ExecStop=/usr/bin/tup stop
CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_SETUID CAP_SETGID
AmbientCapabilities=CAP_SETUID CAP_SETGID
WorkingDirectory=/some/dir
StandardOutput=journal+console
StandardError=journal+console
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
I've added After=network.target, this will make sure TUP service starts after the network is fully active and avoid the service failing due to network issues
I have a go project and when I compile it I get your typical binary. If I call the binary directly from the command line with the adequate inputs, it runs perfectly well. I want to make this program part of the systemd ecosystem and the following is my my gobinary.service
[Unit]
Description=Run Go Service
[Service]
WorkingDirectory=/path/to/directory/
ExecStart=/path/to/directory/binary --config config/service.conf
Restart=always
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
I can start and stop the service using the usual sudo service gobinary start without error messages but the problem is that the program is actually not running because it does not respond to the inputs, namely it has a rabbitmq input queue, despite me sending content to the queue it doesn't react. If however I run the program using the binary directly $ ./binary --config/service.conf everything runs smoothly. How do I troubleshoot this?