custody-probe
supervisorctl status
reports the state of each process controlled by Supervisor: running, stopped,
fatally crashed. However it does not display the state of subprocesses. This becomes a problem
when using Supervisor for local development of microservices, where the processes launched by
Supervisor are not the servers themselves but rather build processes, which in turn launch the servers. The process tree might look something like this:
supervisord
- gulp (using gulp-nodemon)
- node
If node
crashes, gulp
will remain healthy, and so supervisorctl status
will fool you into
thinking that all services are running when they're not.
If you're using custody as a front-end to Supervisor, you
can fix this by adding a single line of code to your webserver:
require('custody-probe')('app');
Now if the "app" webserver crashes, custody will report "app" in state "FATAL" and will only switch
back to "RUNNING" when the webserver comes back up.
Installation
npm install --dev custody-probe
Usage
if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') {
require('custody-probe')('NAME_OF_PROGRAM');
}
If you've installed this as a dev dependency (recommended) you'll need to restrict it to running
in your development environment, as shown using process.env.NODE_ENV
.
The argument to custody-probe is the name of the Supervisor program to which this Node process
belongs. Find the name of the program in your supervisord.conf
file like [program:NAME_OF_PROGRAM]
.
(The program name is usually what's shown in the name
column of supervisorctl status
and
custody
, too, except if you have associated the program with a Supervisor group, in which case
the column will read NAME_OF_GROUP:NAME_OF_PROGRAM
.)
We recommend you add the probe to only 1 (one) process controlled by each program, since as of
v1.0.0 custody only has support for displaying one process' state (in addition to what Supervisor
reports normally). If you add the probe to more processes within the same program, the states will
overwrite each other.
Configuration
By default, custody uses /usr/local/var/custody
to store information and to enable probe->custody communication. You can override this directory by specifying the CUSTODY_PROC_DIR
environment variable.
Contributing
We welcome bug reports and feature suggestions!