What would be the simplest way to daemonize a python script in Linux ? I need that this works with every flavor of Linux, so it should only use python based tools.
问题:
回答1:
See Stevens and also this lengthy thread on activestate which I found personally to be both mostly incorrect and much to verbose, and I came up with this:
from os import fork, setsid, umask, dup2
from sys import stdin, stdout, stderr
if fork(): exit(0)
umask(0)
setsid()
if fork(): exit(0)
stdout.flush()
stderr.flush()
si = file('/dev/null', 'r')
so = file('/dev/null', 'a+')
se = file('/dev/null', 'a+', 0)
dup2(si.fileno(), stdin.fileno())
dup2(so.fileno(), stdout.fileno())
dup2(se.fileno(), stderr.fileno())
If you need to stop that process again, it is required to know the pid, the usual solution to this is pidfiles. Do this if you need one
from os import getpid
outfile = open(pid_file, 'w')
outfile.write('%i' % getpid())
outfile.close()
For security reasons you might consider any of these after demonizing
from os import setuid, setgid, chdir
from pwd import getpwnam
from grp import getgrnam
setuid(getpwnam('someuser').pw_uid)
setgid(getgrnam('somegroup').gr_gid)
chdir('/')
You could also use nohup but that does not work well with python's subprocess module
回答2:
nohup
Creating a daemon the Python way
回答3:
I have recently used Turkmenbashi :
$ easy_install turkmenbashi
import Turkmenbashi
class DebugDaemon (Turkmenbashi.Daemon):
def config(self):
self.debugging = True
def go(self):
self.debug('a debug message')
self.info('an info message')
self.warn('a warning message')
self.error('an error message')
self.critical('a critical message')
if __name__=="__main__":
d = DebugDaemon()
d.config()
d.setenv(30, '/var/run/daemon.pid', '/tmp', None)
d.start(d.go)
回答4:
If you do not care for actual discussions (which tend to go offtopic and do not offer authoritative response), you can choose some library that will make your tast easier. I'd recomment taking a look at ll-xist, this library contains large amount of life-saving code, like cron jobs helper, daemon framework, and (what is not interesting to you, but is really great) object-oriented XSL (ll-xist itself).
回答5:
Use grizzled.os.daemonize:
$ easy_install grizzled
>>> from grizzled.os import daemonize
>>> daemon.daemonize()
To understand how this works or to do it yourself, read the discussion on ActiveState.