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@genie-solutions/forever-monitor
Advanced tools
The core monitoring functionality of forever without the CLI
You can also use forever from inside your own Node.js code.
var forever = require('forever-monitor');
var child = new (forever.Monitor)('your-filename.js', {
max: 3,
silent: true,
args: []
});
child.on('exit', function () {
console.log('your-filename.js has exited after 3 restarts');
});
child.start();
You can spawn non-node processes too. Either set the command
key in the
options
hash or pass in an Array
in place of the file
argument like this:
var forever = require('forever-monitor');
var child = forever.start([ 'perl', '-le', 'print "moo"' ], {
max : 1,
silent : true
});
There are several options that you should be aware of when using forever. Most of this configuration is optional.
{
//
// Basic configuration options
//
'silent': false, // Silences the output from stdout and stderr in the parent process
'uid': 'your-UID', // Custom uid for this forever process. (default: autogen)
'pidFile': 'path/to/a.pid', // Path to put pid information for the process(es) started
'max': 10, // Sets the maximum number of times a given script should run
'killTree': true, // Kills the entire child process tree on `exit`
//
// These options control how quickly forever restarts a child process
// as well as when to kill a "spinning" process
//
'minUptime': 2000, // Minimum time a child process has to be up. Forever will 'exit' otherwise.
'spinSleepTime': 1000, // Interval between restarts if a child is spinning (i.e. alive < minUptime).
//
// Command to spawn as well as options and other vars
// (env, cwd, etc) to pass along
//
'command': 'perl', // Binary to run (default: 'node')
'args': ['foo','bar'], // Additional arguments to pass to the script,
'sourceDir': 'script/path',// Directory that the source script is in
//
// Options for restarting on watched files.
//
'watch': true, // Value indicating if we should watch files.
'watchIgnoreDotFiles': null, // Whether to ignore file starting with a '.'
'watchIgnorePatterns': null, // Ignore patterns to use when watching files.
'watchDirectory': null, // Top-level directory to watch from. You can provide multiple watchDirectory options to watch multiple directories (e.g. for cli: forever start -w='app' -w='some_other_directory' app\index.js)
//
// All or nothing options passed along to `child_process.spawn`.
//
'spawnWith': {
customFds: [-1, -1, -1], // that forever spawns.
setsid: false,
uid: 0, // Custom UID
gid: 0 // Custom GID
},
//
// More specific options to pass along to `child_process.spawn` which
// will override anything passed to the `spawnWith` option
//
'env': { 'ADDITIONAL': 'CHILD ENV VARS' },
'cwd': '/path/to/child/working/directory',
//
// Log files and associated logging options for this instance
//
'logFile': 'path/to/file', // Path to log output from forever process (when daemonized)
'outFile': 'path/to/file', // Path to log output from child stdout
'errFile': 'path/to/file', // Path to log output from child stderr
//
// ### function parseCommand (command, args)
// #### @command {String} Command string to parse
// #### @args {Array} Additional default arguments
//
// Returns the `command` and the `args` parsed from
// any command. Use this to modify the default parsing
// done by 'forever-monitor' around spaces.
//
'parser': function (command, args) {
return {
command: command,
args: args
};
}
}
Each forever object is an instance of the Node.js core EventEmitter. There are several core events that you can listen for:
When running the forever CLI tool, it produces debug outputs about which files have changed / how processes exited / etc. To get a similar behaviour with forever-monitor
, add the following event listeners:
const child = new (forever.Monitor)('your-filename.js');
child.on('watch:restart', function(info) {
console.error('Restarting script because ' + info.file + ' changed');
});
child.on('restart', function() {
console.error('Forever restarting script for ' + child.times + ' time');
});
child.on('exit:code', function(code) {
console.error('Forever detected script exited with code ' + code);
});
$ npm install forever-monitor
$ npm test
FAQs
Core forever process monitor
The npm package @genie-solutions/forever-monitor receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, @genie-solutions/forever-monitor popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @genie-solutions/forever-monitor demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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