-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 2
/
Copy pathmy-application-script
73 lines (67 loc) · 3.16 KB
/
my-application-script
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
#!upstart
#
# An example upstart script for running a Node.js process as a service
# using Forever as the process monitor. For more configuration options
# associated with Forever, see: https://github.com/nodejitsu/forever
#
# You will need to set the environment variables noted below to conform to
# your use case, and should change the description.
#
description "Example upstart script for a Node.js process"
start on startup
stop on shutdown
# This line is needed so that Upstart reports the pid of the Node.js process
# started by Forever rather than Forever's pid.
expect fork
# The following environment variables must be set so as to define
# where Node.js and Forever binaries and the Node.js source code
# can be found.
#
# The example environment variables below assume that Node.js is
# installed into /home/node/local/node by building from source as outlined
# here:
# https://www.exratione.com/2011/07/running-a-nodejs-server-as-a-service-using-forever/
#
# It should be easy enough to adapt to the paths to be appropriate to a
# package installation, but note that the packages available for Ubuntu in
# the default repositories are far behind the times. Most users will be
# building from source to get a more recent Node.js version.
#
# The full path to the directory containing the node and forever binaries.
# env NODE_BIN_DIR="/home/node/local/node/bin"
# Set the NODE_PATH to the Node.js main node_modules directory.
# env NODE_PATH="/home/node/local/node/lib/node_modules"
# The directory containing the application Javascript file.
# env APPLICATION_DIRECTORY="/home/node/my-application"
# The application start Javascript filename.
# env APPLICATION_START="start-my-application.js"
# Log file path.
# env LOG="/var/log/my-application.log"
env NODE_BIN_DIR="/home/ku4n/.nvm/v0.10.11/bin"
env NODE_PATH="/home/ku4n/public/2dspot.com/src/node_modules"
env APPLICATION_DIRECTORY="/home/ku4n/public/2dspot.com/src"
env APPLICATION_START="app.js"
env LOG="/var/log/2dspot"
script
# Add the node executables to the path, which includes Forever if it is
# installed globally, which it should be.
PATH=$NODE_BIN_DIR:$PATH
# The minUptime and spinSleepTime settings stop Forever from thrashing if
# the application fails immediately on launch. This is generally necessary to
# avoid loading development servers to the point of failure every time
# someone makes an error in application initialization code, or bringing down
# production servers the same way if a database or other critical service
# suddenly becomes inaccessible.
exec forever --sourceDir $APPLICATION_DIRECTORY -a -l $LOG \
--minUptime 5000 --spinSleepTime 2000 start $APPLICATION_START
end script
pre-stop script
# Add the node executables to the path.
PATH=$NODE_BIN_DIR:$PATH
# Here we're using the pre-stop script to stop the Node.js application
# process so that Forever is given a chance to do its thing and tidy up
# its data. Note that doing it this way means that each application that
# runs under Forever must have a different start file name, regardless of
# which directory it is in.
exec forever stop $APPLICATION_START >> $LOG
end script