• Stars
    star
    413
  • Rank 104,801 (Top 3 %)
  • Language
    Ruby
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 11 years ago
  • Updated over 1 year ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

simple process monitoring tool

Bluepill

Bluepill is a simple process monitoring tool written in Ruby.

Gem Version Build Status Dependency Status Code Climate Coverage Status

Installation

It's hosted on rubygems.org.

sudo gem install bluepill

In order to take advantage of logging with syslog, you also need to setup your syslog to log the local6 facility. Edit the appropriate config file for your syslogger (/etc/syslog.conf for syslog) and add a line for local6:

local6.*          /var/log/bluepill.log

You'll also want to add /var/log/bluepill.log to /etc/logrotate.d/syslog so that it gets rotated.

Lastly, create the /var/run/bluepill directory for bluepill to store its pid and sock files.

Usage

Config

Bluepill organizes processes into 3 levels: application -> group -> process. Each process has a few attributes that tell bluepill how to start, stop, and restart it, where to look or put the pid file, what process conditions to monitor and the options for each of those.

The minimum config file looks something like this:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
  end
end

Note that since we specified a PID file and start command, bluepill assumes the process will daemonize itself. If we wanted bluepill to daemonize it for us, we can do (note we still need to specify a PID file):

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.daemonize = true
  end
end

If you don't specify a stop command, a TERM signal will be sent by default. Similarly, the default restart action is to issue stop and then start.

Now if we want to do something more meaningful, like actually monitor the process, we do:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 5, times: 3
  end
end

We added a line that checks every 10 seconds to make sure the cpu usage of this process is below 5 percent; 3 failed checks results in a restart. We can specify a two-element array for the times option to say that it 3 out of 5 failed attempts results in a restart.

To watch memory usage, we just add one more line:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 5, times: 3
    process.checks :mem_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 100.megabytes, times: [3,5]
  end
end

To watch the modification time of a file, e.g. a log file to ensure the process is actually working add one more line:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 5, times: 3
    process.checks :mem_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 100.megabytes, times: [3,5]
    process.checks :file_time, every: 60.seconds, below: 3.minutes, filename: "/tmp/some_file.log", times: 2
  end
end

To restart process if it's running too long:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.checks :running_time, every: 10.minutes, below: 24.hours
  end
end

We can tell bluepill to give a process some grace time to start/stop/restart before resuming monitoring:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.start_grace_time = 3.seconds
    process.stop_grace_time = 5.seconds
    process.restart_grace_time = 8.seconds
    process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 5, times: 3
    process.checks :mem_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 100.megabytes, times: [3,5]
  end
end

We can group processes by name:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  5.times do |i|
    app.process("process_name_#{i}") do |process|
      process.group = "mongrels"
      process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
      process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    end
  end
end

If you want to run the process as someone other than root:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.uid = "deploy"
    process.gid = "deploy"
    process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 5, times: 3
    process.checks :mem_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 100.megabytes, times: [3,5]
  end
end

If you want to include one or more supplementary groups:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.uid = "deploy"
    process.gid = "deploy"
    process.supplementary_groups = ['rvm']
    process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 5, times: 3
    process.checks :mem_usage, every: 10.seconds, below: 100.megabytes, times: [3,5]
  end
end

You can also set an app-wide uid/gid:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.uid = "deploy"
  app.gid = "deploy"
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
  end
end

To track resources of child processes, use :include_children:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.checks :mem_usage, every: 1.seconds, below: 5.megabytes, times: [3,5], include_children: true
  end
end

To check for flapping:

process.checks :flapping, times: 2, within: 30.seconds, retry_in: 7.seconds

To set the working directory to cd into when starting the command:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.working_dir = "/path/to/some_directory"
  end
end

You can also have an app-wide working directory:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.working_dir = "/path/to/some_directory"
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
  end
end

Note: We also set the PWD in the environment to the working dir you specify. This is useful for when the working dir is a symlink. Unicorn in particular will cd into the environment variable in PWD when it re-execs to deal with a change in the symlink.

By default, bluepill will send a SIGTERM to your process when stopping. To change the stop command:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.stop_command = "/user/bin/some_stop_command"
  end
end

If you'd like to send a signal or signals to your process to stop it:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
    process.stop_signals = [:quit, 30.seconds, :term, 5.seconds, :kill]
  end
end

We added a line that will send a SIGQUIT, wait 30 seconds and check to see if the process is still up, send a SIGTERM, wait 5 seconds and check to see if the process is still up, and finally send a SIGKILL.

And lastly, to monitor child processes:

process.monitor_children do |child_process|
  child_process.checks :cpu_usage, every: 10, below: 5, times: 3
  child_process.checks :mem_usage, every: 10, below: 100.megabytes, times: [3, 5]
  child_process.stop_command = "kill -QUIT {{PID}}"
end

Note {{PID}} will be substituted for the pid of process in both the stop and restart commands.

A Note About Output Redirection

While you can specify shell tricks like the following in the start_command of a process:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "cd /tmp/some_dir && SOME_VAR=1 /usr/bin/some_start_command > /tmp/server.log 2>&1"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
  end
end

We recommend that you not do that and instead use the config options to capture output from your daemons. Like so:

Bluepill.application("app_name") do |app|
  app.process("process_name") do |process|
    process.start_command = "/usr/bin/env SOME_VAR=1 /usr/bin/some_start_command"
    process.working_dir = "/tmp/some_dir"
    process.stdout = process.stderr = "/tmp/server.log"
    process.pid_file = "/tmp/some_pid_file.pid"
  end
end

The main benefit of using the config options is that Bluepill will be able to monitor the correct process instead of just watching the shell that spawned your actual server.

CLI

Usage

bluepill [app_name] command [options]

For the "load" command, the app_name is specified in the config file, and must not be provided on the command line.

For all other commands, the app_name is optional if there is only one bluepill daemon running. Otherwise, the app_name must be provided, because the command will fail when there are multiple bluepill daemons running. The example commands below leaves out the app_name.

Commands

To start a bluepill daemon and load the config for an application:

sudo bluepill load /path/to/production.pill

To act on a process or group for an application:

sudo bluepill <start|stop|restart|unmonitor> <process_or_group_name>

To view process statuses for an application:

sudo bluepill status

To view the log for a process or group for an application:

sudo bluepill log <process_or_group_name>

To quit the bluepill daemon for an application:

sudo bluepill quit

Logging

By default, bluepill uses syslog local6 facility as described in the installation section. But if for any reason you don't want to use syslog, you can use a log file. You can do this by setting the :log_file option in the config:

Bluepill.application("app_name", log_file: "/path/to/bluepill.log") do |app|
  # ...
end

Keep in mind that you still need to set up log rotation (described in the installation section) to keep the log file from growing huge.

Foreground mode

You can run bluepill in the foreground:

Bluepill.application("app_name", foreground: true) do |app|
  # ...
end

Note that You must define only one application per config when using foreground mode.

JRuby allows you to run bluepill only in the foreground.

Links

Supported Ruby Versions

This library aims to support and is tested against the following Ruby implementations:

  • Ruby 1.9.3
  • Ruby 2.0.0
  • Ruby 2.1
  • Ruby 2.2
  • JRuby 1.7 (only in the foreground)
  • JRuby 9.0.0.0 (only in the foreground)

If something doesn't work on one of these interpreters, please open an issue.

This library may inadvertently work (or seem to work) on other Ruby implementations, however support will only be provided for the versions listed above.

If you would like this library to support another Ruby version, you may volunteer to be a maintainer. Being a maintainer entails making sure all tests run and pass on that implementation. When something breaks on your implementation, you will be responsible for providing patches in a timely fashion. If critical issues for a particular implementation exist at the time of a major release, support for that Ruby version may be dropped.