Run python script as daemon at boot time (Ubuntu)

梦想与她 提交于 2019-11-28 17:20:21
tvuillemin

In addition to gg.kaspersky method, you could also turn your script into a "service", so that you can start or stop it using:

$ sudo service myserver start
 * Starting system myserver.py Daemon                          [ OK ]
$ sudo service myserver status
 * /path/to/myserver.py is running
$ sudo service myserver stop
 * Stopping system myserver.py Daemon                          [ OK ]

and define it as a startup service using:

$ sudo update-rc.d myserver defaults

To do this, you must create this file and save it in /etc/init.d/.

#!/bin/sh -e

DAEMON="/path/to/myserver.py"
DAEMONUSER="myuser"
DAEMON_NAME="myserver.py"

PATH="/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin"

test -x $DAEMON || exit 0

. /lib/lsb/init-functions

d_start () {
        log_daemon_msg "Starting system $DAEMON_NAME Daemon"
        start-stop-daemon --background --name $DAEMON_NAME --start --user $DAEMONUSER --exec $DAEMON
        log_end_msg $?
}

d_stop () {
        log_daemon_msg "Stopping system $DAEMON_NAME Daemon"
        start-stop-daemon --name $DAEMON_NAME --stop --retry 5 --name $DAEMON_NAME
          log_end_msg $?
}

case "$1" in

        start|stop)
                d_${1}
                ;;

        restart|reload|force-reload)
                        d_stop
                        d_start
                ;;

        force-stop)
               d_stop
                killall -q $DAEMON_NAME || true
                sleep 2
                killall -q -9 $DAEMON_NAME || true
                ;;

        status)
                status_of_proc "$DAEMON_NAME" "$DAEMON" "system-wide $DAEMON_NAME" && exit 0 || exit $?
                ;;
        *)
                echo "Usage: /etc/init.d/$DAEMON_NAME {start|stop|force-stop|restart|reload|force-reload|status}"
                exit 1
                ;;
esac
exit 0

In this example, I assume you have a shebang like #!/usr/bin/python at the head of your python file, so that you can execute it directly.

Last but not least, do not forget to give execution rights to your python server and to the service script :

$ sudo chmod 755 /etc/init.d/myserver
$ sudo chmod 755 /path/to/mserver.py

Here's the page where I learned this originally (french).

Cheers.

One simple way to do is using crontab:

$ crontab -e

A crontab file will appear for editing, write the line at the end:

@reboot python myserver.py

and quit. Now, after each reboot, the cron daemon will run your myserver python script.

If you have supervisor service that starts at boot, write a supervisor service is much, much simpler.

You can even set autorestart if your program fails.

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