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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Systemd specify a config file Post 303045856 by calanon on Thursday 16th of April 2020 02:39:32 AM
Old 04-16-2020
Systemd specify a config file

I have this systemd unit file and my attempt was to convert the existing init.d script to a systemd unit file. I am having trouble declaring the config file that should be used as declared in the init.d script.

Here is the init.d script:
Code:
# The following variables can be overwritten in $DEFAULT
# maximum number of open files
MAX_OPEN_FILES=
# overwrite settings from default file
if [ -f "$DEFAULT" ]; then
      . "$DEFAULT"
fi
# set maximum open files if set
if [ -n "$MAX_OPEN_FILES" ]; then
    ulimit -n $MAX_OPEN_FILES
fi
get_user_shell() {
    local shell=$(getent passwd ${1:-`whoami`} | cut -d: -f7 | sed -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')
    if [[ $shell == *"/sbin/nologin" ]] || [[ $shell == "/bin/false" ]] || [[ -z "$shell" ]];
    then
      shell="/bin/bash"
    fi
    echo "$shell"
}
super() {
    local shell=$(get_user_shell $USER)
    su - $USER -s $shell -c "PATH=$PATH; PM2_HOME=$PM2_HOME $*"
}
start() {
    echo "Starting $NAME"
    super $PM2 start --only="$PM2_APP_NAME" --env=production $PM2_CONFIG_FILE
}
stop() {
    super $PM2 stop --only="$PM2_APP_NAME" $PM2_CONFIG_FILE
    $PM2 kill
}
restart() {
    echo "Restarting $NAME"
    stop
    start
}
reload() {
    echo "Reloading $NAME"
    super $PM2 reload --only="$PM2_APP_NAME" $PM2_CONFIG_FILE
}
status() {
    echo "Status for $NAME:"
    super $PM2 list
    RETVAL=$?
}
case "$1" in
    start)
        start
        ;;
    stop)
        stop
        ;;
    status)
        status
        ;;
    restart)
        restart
        ;;
    reload)
        reload
        ;;
    force-reload)
        reload
        ;;
    *)
        echo "Usage: {start|stop|status|restart|reload|force-reload}"
        exit 1
        ;;
esac
exit $RETVAL

And here is my attempt so far of the systemd unit file:

Code:
[Unit]
Description=app1
Documentation=https://pm2.keymetrics.io/
After=network.target

[Service]
Type=forking
User=appuser
LimitNOFILE=infinity
LimitNPROC=infinity
LimitCORE=infinity
Environment=PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/games:/usr/games:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
Environment=PM2_HOME=/home/appuser/.pm2
PIDFile=/home/appuser/.pm2/pm2.pid
Restart=on-failure

ExecStart=/home/appuser/products/services/ash/releases/2.10.0/node_modules/pm2/bin/pm2  "-c /home/appuser/products/services/app1/current/ecosystem.config.js"
ExecReload=/home/appuser/products/services/ash/releases/2.10.0/node_modules/pm2/bin/pm2 reload all
ExecStop=/home/appuser/products/services/ash/releases/2.10.0/node_modules/pm2/bin/pm2 kill

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

So far I cannot get this to work?

Last edited by calanon; 04-16-2020 at 04:51 AM..
 

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SYSTEMD.ENVIRONMENT-GENERATOR(7)			   systemd.environment-generator			  SYSTEMD.ENVIRONMENT-GENERATOR(7)

NAME
systemd.environment-generator - systemd environment file generators SYNOPSIS
/lib/systemd/system-environment-generators/some-generator /usr/lib/systemd/user-environment-generators/some-generator /run/systemd/system-environment-generators/* /etc/systemd/system-environment-generators/* /usr/local/lib/systemd/system-environment-generators/* /lib/systemd/system-environment-generators/* /run/systemd/user-environment-generators/* /etc/systemd/user-environment-generators/* /usr/local/lib/systemd/user-environment-generators/* /usr/lib/systemd/user-environment-generators/* DESCRIPTION
Generators are small executables that live in /lib/systemd/system-environment-generators/ and other directories listed above. systemd(1) will execute those binaries very early at the startup of each manager and at configuration reload time, before running the generators described in systemd.generator(7) and before starting any units. Environment generators can override the environment that the manager exports to services and other processes. Generators are loaded from a set of paths determined during compilation, as listed above. System and user environment generators are loaded from directories with names ending in system-environment-generators/ and user-environment-generators/, respectively. Generators found in directories listed earlier override the ones with the same name in directories lower in the list. A symlink to /dev/null or an empty file can be used to mask a generator, thereby preventing it from running. Please note that the order of the two directories with the highest priority is reversed with respect to the unit load path, and generators in /run overwrite those in /etc. After installing new generators or updating the configuration, systemctl daemon-reload may be executed. This will re-run all generators, updating environment configuration. It will be used for any services that are started subsequently. Environment file generators are executed similarly to unit file generators described in systemd.generator(7), with the following differences: o Generators are executed sequentially in the alphanumerical order of the final component of their name. The output of each generator output is immediately parsed and used to update the environment for generators that run after that. Thus, later generators can use and/or modify the output of earlier generators. o Generators are run by every manager instance, their output can be different for each user. It is recommended to use numerical prefixes for generator names to simplify ordering. EXAMPLES
Example 1. A simple generator that extends an environment variable if a directory exists in the file system # 50-xdg-data-dirs.sh #!/bin/bash # set the default value XDG_DATA_DIRS="${XDG_DATA_DIRS:-/usr/local/share/:/usr/share}" # add a directory if it exists if [[ -d /opt/foo/share ]]; then XDG_DATA_DIRS=/opt/foo/share:${XDG_DATA_DIRS} fi # write our output echo XDG_DATA_DIRS=$XDG_DATA_DIRS Example 2. A more complicated generator which reads existing configuration and mutates one variable # 90-rearrange-path.py #!/usr/bin/env python3 """ Proof-of-concept systemd environment generator that makes sure that bin dirs are always after matching sbin dirs in the path. (Changes /sbin:/bin:/foo/bar to /bin:/sbin:/foo/bar.) This generator shows how to override the configuration possibly created by earlier generators. It would be easier to write in bash, but let's have it in Python just to prove that we can, and to serve as a template for more interesting generators. """ import os import pathlib def rearrange_bin_sbin(path): """Make sure any pair of .../bin, .../sbin directories is in this order >>> rearrange_bin_sbin('/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin') '/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin' """ items = [pathlib.Path(p) for p in path.split(':')] for i in range(len(items)): if 'sbin' in items[i].parts: ind = items[i].parts.index('sbin') bin = pathlib.Path(*items[i].parts[:ind], 'bin', *items[i].parts[ind+1:]) if bin in items[i+1:]: j = i + 1 + items[i+1:].index(bin) items[i], items[j] = items[j], items[i] return ':'.join(p.as_posix() for p in items) if __name__ == '__main__': path = os.environ['PATH'] # This should be always set. # If it's not, we'll just crash, we is OK too. new = rearrange_bin_sbin(path) if new != path: print('PATH={}'.format(new)) Example 3. Debugging a generator SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug VAR_A=something VAR_B="something else" /lib/systemd/system-environment-generators/path-to-generator SEE ALSO
systemd-environment-d-generator(8), systemd.generator(7), systemd(1), systemctl(1) systemd 237 SYSTEMD.ENVIRONMENT-GENERATOR(7)
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