2009-03-18 22:14:42 -04:00
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PEP: 3143
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Title: Standard daemon process library
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2009-03-31 14:11:49 -04:00
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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2009-03-18 22:14:42 -04:00
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Author: Ben Finney <ben+python@benfinney.id.au>
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 2009-01-26
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Python-Version: 3.2
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Post-History:
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========
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Abstract
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========
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Writing a program to become a well-behaved Unix daemon is somewhat
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complex and tricky to get right, yet the steps are largely similar for
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any daemon regardless of what else the program may need to do.
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This PEP introduces a package to the Python standard library that
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provides a simple interface to the task of becoming a daemon process.
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.. contents::
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..
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Table of Contents:
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Abstract
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Specification
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Example usage
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Interface
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``DaemonContext`` objects
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Motivation
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Rationale
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Correct daemon behaviour
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A daemon is not a service
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Reference Implementation
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Other daemon implementations
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References
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Copyright
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=============
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Specification
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=============
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Example usage
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=============
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Simple example of direct `DaemonContext` usage::
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import daemon
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from spam import do_main_program
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2009-04-04 18:19:09 -04:00
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with daemon.DaemonContext():
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do_main_program()
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More complex example usage::
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import os
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import grp
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import signal
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import daemon
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import lockfile
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from spam import (
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initial_program_setup,
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do_main_program,
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program_cleanup,
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reload_program_config,
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)
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context = daemon.DaemonContext(
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working_directory='/var/lib/foo',
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umask=0o002,
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pidfile=lockfile.FileLock('/var/run/spam.pid'),
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)
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context.signal_map = {
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signal.SIGTERM: program_cleanup,
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signal.SIGHUP: 'terminate',
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signal.SIGUSR1: reload_program_config,
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}
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mail_gid = grp.getgrnam('mail').gr_gid
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context.gid = mail_gid
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important_file = open('spam.data', 'w')
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interesting_file = open('eggs.data', 'w')
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context.files_preserve = [important_file, interesting_file]
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initial_program_setup()
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with context:
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do_main_program()
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Interface
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=========
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A new package, `daemon`, is added to the standard library.
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A class, `DaemonContext`, is defined to represent the settings and
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process context for the program running as a daemon process.
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``DaemonContext`` objects
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=========================
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A `DaemonContext` instance represents the behaviour settings and
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process context for the program when it becomes a daemon. The
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behaviour and environment is customised by setting options on the
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instance, before calling the `open` method.
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Each option can be passed as a keyword argument to the `DaemonContext`
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constructor, or subsequently altered by assigning to an attribute on
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the instance at any time prior to calling `open`. That is, for
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options named `wibble` and `wubble`, the following invocation::
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foo = daemon.DaemonContext(wibble=bar, wubble=baz)
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foo.open()
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is equivalent to::
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foo = daemon.DaemonContext()
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foo.wibble = bar
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foo.wubble = baz
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foo.open()
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The following options are defined.
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`files_preserve`
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:Default: ``None``
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List of files that should *not* be closed when starting the
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daemon. If ``None``, all open file descriptors will be closed.
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Elements of the list are file descriptors (as returned by a file
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object's `fileno()` method) or Python `file` objects. Each
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specifies a file that is not to be closed during daemon start.
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`chroot_directory`
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:Default: ``None``
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Full path to a directory to set as the effective root directory of
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the process. If ``None``, specifies that the root directory is not
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to be changed.
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`working_directory`
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:Default: ``'/'``
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Full path of the working directory to which the process should
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change on daemon start.
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Since a filesystem cannot be unmounted if a process has its
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current working directory on that filesystem, this should either
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be left at default or set to a directory that is a sensible “home
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directory” for the daemon while it is running.
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`umask`
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:Default: ``0``
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File access creation mask (“umask”) to set for the process on
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daemon start.
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Since a process inherits its umask from its parent process,
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starting the daemon will reset the umask to this value so that
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files are created by the daemon with access modes as it expects.
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`pidfile`
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:Default: ``None``
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Context manager for a PID lock file. When the daemon context opens
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and closes, it enters and exits the `pidfile` context manager.
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`detach_process`
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:Default: ``None``
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If ``True``, detach the process context when opening the daemon
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context; if ``False``, do not detach.
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If unspecified (``None``) during initialisation of the instance,
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this will be set to ``True`` by default, and ``False`` only if
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detaching the process is determined to be redundant; for example,
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in the case when the process was started by `init`, by `initd`, or
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by `inetd`.
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`signal_map`
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:Default: system-dependent
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Mapping from operating system signals to callback actions.
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The mapping is used when the daemon context opens, and determines
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the action for each signal's signal handler:
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* A value of ``None`` will ignore the signal (by setting the
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signal action to ``signal.SIG_IGN``).
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* A string value will be used as the name of an attribute on the
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``DaemonContext`` instance. The attribute's value will be used
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as the action for the signal handler.
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* Any other value will be used as the action for the signal
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handler.
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The default value depends on which signals are defined on the
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running system. Each item from the list below whose signal is
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actually defined in the ``signal`` module will appear in the
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default map:
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* ``signal.SIGTTIN``: ``None``
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* ``signal.SIGTTOU``: ``None``
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* ``signal.SIGTSTP``: ``None``
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* ``signal.SIGTERM``: ``'terminate'``
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2009-09-17 05:37:29 -04:00
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Depending on how the program will interact with its child
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processes, it may need to specify a signal map that includes the
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``signal.SIGCHLD`` signal (received when a child process exits).
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See the specific operating system's documentation for more detail
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on how to determine what circumstances dictate the need for signal
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handlers.
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2009-03-18 22:14:42 -04:00
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`uid`
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:Default: ``os.getuid()``
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`gid`
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:Default: ``os.getgid()``
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The user ID (“UID”) value and group ID (“GID”) value to switch
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the process to on daemon start.
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The default values, the real UID and GID of the process, will
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relinquish any effective privilege elevation inherited by the
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process.
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`prevent_core`
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:Default: ``True``
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If true, prevents the generation of core files, in order to avoid
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leaking sensitive information from daemons run as `root`.
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`stdin`
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:Default: ``None``
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`stdout`
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:Default: ``None``
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`stderr`
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:Default: ``None``
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Each of `stdin`, `stdout`, and `stderr` is a file-like object
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which will be used as the new file for the standard I/O stream
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`sys.stdin`, `sys.stdout`, and `sys.stderr` respectively. The file
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should therefore be open, with a minimum of mode 'r' in the case
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of `stdin`, and mode 'w+' in the case of `stdout` and `stderr`.
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If the object has a `fileno()` method that returns a file
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descriptor, the corresponding file will be excluded from being
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closed during daemon start (that is, it will be treated as though
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it were listed in `files_preserve`).
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If ``None``, the corresponding system stream is re-bound to the
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file named by `os.devnull`.
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The following methods are defined.
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`open()`
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:Return: ``None``
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Open the daemon context, turning the current program into a daemon
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process. This performs the following steps:
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2009-09-17 05:37:29 -04:00
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* If this instance's `is_open` property is true, return
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immediately. This makes it safe to call `open` multiple times on
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an instance.
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2009-03-18 22:14:42 -04:00
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* If the `prevent_core` attribute is true, set the resource limits
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for the process to prevent any core dump from the process.
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* If the `chroot_directory` attribute is not ``None``, set the
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effective root directory of the process to that directory (via
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`os.chroot`).
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This allows running the daemon process inside a “chroot gaol”
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as a means of limiting the system's exposure to rogue behaviour
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by the process. Note that the specified directory needs to
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already be set up for this purpose.
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* Set the process UID and GID to the `uid` and `gid` attribute
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values.
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* Close all open file descriptors. This excludes those listed in
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the `files_preserve` attribute, and those that correspond to the
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`stdin`, `stdout`, or `stderr` attributes.
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* Change current working directory to the path specified by the
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`working_directory` attribute.
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* Reset the file access creation mask to the value specified by
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the `umask` attribute.
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* If the `detach_process` option is true, detach the current
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process into its own process group, and disassociate from any
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controlling terminal.
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* Set signal handlers as specified by the `signal_map` attribute.
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* If any of the attributes `stdin`, `stdout`, `stderr` are not
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``None``, bind the system streams `sys.stdin`, `sys.stdout`,
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and/or `sys.stderr` to the files represented by the
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corresponding attributes. Where the attribute has a file
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descriptor, the descriptor is duplicated (instead of re-binding
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the name).
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* If the `pidfile` attribute is not ``None``, enter its context
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manager.
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2009-09-17 05:37:29 -04:00
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* Mark this instance as open (for the purpose of future `open` and
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`close` calls).
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* Register the `close` method to be called during Python's exit
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processing.
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When the function returns, the running program is a daemon
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process.
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`close()`
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:Return: ``None``
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2009-09-17 05:37:29 -04:00
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Close the daemon context. This performs the following steps:
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* If this instance's `is_open` property is false, return
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immediately. This makes it safe to call `close` multiple times
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on an instance.
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* If the `pidfile` attribute is not ``None``, exit its context
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manager.
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2009-09-17 05:37:29 -04:00
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* Mark this instance as closed (for the purpose of future `open`
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and `close` calls).
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`is_open`
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:Return: ``True`` if the instance is open, ``False`` otherwise.
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This property exposes the state indicating whether the instance is
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currently open. It is ``True`` if the instance's `open` method has
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been called and the `close` method has not subsequently been
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called.
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2009-03-18 22:14:42 -04:00
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`terminate(signal_number, stack_frame)`
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:Return: ``None``
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Signal handler for the ``signal.SIGTERM`` signal. Performs the
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following step:
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* Raise a ``SystemExit`` exception explaining the signal.
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The class also implements the context manager protocol via
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``__enter__`` and ``__exit__`` methods.
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`__enter__()`
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:Return: The ``DaemonContext`` instance
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Call the instance's `open()` method, then return the instance.
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`__exit__(exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback)`
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:Return: ``True`` or ``False`` as defined by the context manager
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protocol
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Call the instance's `close()` method, then return ``True`` if the
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exception was handled or ``False`` if it was not.
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==========
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Motivation
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==========
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The majority of programs written to be Unix daemons either implement
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behaviour very similar to that in the `specification`_, or are
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poorly-behaved daemons by the `correct daemon behaviour`_.
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Since these steps should be much the same in most implementations but
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are very particular and easy to omit or implement incorrectly, they
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are a prime target for a standard well-tested implementation in the
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standard library.
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=========
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Rationale
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=========
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Correct daemon behaviour
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========================
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According to Stevens in [stevens]_ §2.6, a program should perform the
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following steps to become a Unix daemon process.
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* Close all open file descriptors.
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* Change current working directory.
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* Reset the file access creation mask.
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* Run in the background.
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* Disassociate from process group.
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* Ignore terminal I/O signals.
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* Disassociate from control terminal.
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* Don't reacquire a control terminal.
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* Correctly handle the following circumstances:
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* Started by System V `init` process.
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* Daemon termination by ``SIGTERM`` signal.
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* Children generate ``SIGCLD`` signal.
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The `daemon` tool [slack-daemon]_ lists (in its summary of features)
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behaviour that should be performed when turning a program into a
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well-behaved Unix daemon process. It differs from this PEP's intent in
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that it invokes a *separate* program as a daemon process. The
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following features are appropriate for a daemon that starts itself
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once the program is already running:
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* Sets up the correct process context for a daemon.
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* Behaves sensibly when started by `initd(8)` or `inetd(8)`.
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* Revokes any suid or sgid privileges to reduce security risks in case
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daemon is incorrectly installed with special privileges.
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* Prevents the generation of core files to prevent leaking sensitive
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information from daemons run as root (optional).
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* Names the daemon by creating and locking a PID file to guarantee
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that only one daemon with the given name can execute at any given
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time (optional).
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* Sets the user and group under which to run the daemon (optional,
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root only).
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* Creates a chroot gaol (optional, root only).
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* Captures the daemon's stdout and stderr and directs them to syslog
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(optional).
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A daemon is not a service
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=========================
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This PEP addresses only Unix-style daemons, for which the above
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correct behaviour is relevant, as opposed to comparable behaviours on
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other operating systems.
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There is a related concept in many systems, called a “service”. A
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service differs from the model in this PEP, in that rather than having
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the *current* program continue to run as a daemon process, a service
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starts an *additional* process to run in the background, and the
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current process communicates with that additional process via some
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defined channels.
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The Unix-style daemon model in this PEP can be used, among other
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things, to implement the background-process part of a service; but
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this PEP does not address the other aspects of setting up and managing
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a service.
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========================
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Reference Implementation
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========================
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The `python-daemon` package [python-daemon]_.
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Other daemon implementations
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============================
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Prior to this PEP, several existing third-party Python libraries or
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tools implemented some of this PEP's `correct daemon behaviour`_.
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The `reference implementation`_ is a fairly direct successor from the
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following implementations:
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* Many good ideas were contributed by the community to Python cookbook
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recipes #66012 [cookbook-66012]_ and #278731 [cookbook-278731]_.
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* The `bda.daemon` library [bda.daemon]_ is an implementation of
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[cookbook-66012]_. It is the predecessor of [python-daemon]_.
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Other Python daemon implementations that differ from this PEP:
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* The `zdaemon` tool [zdaemon]_ was written for the Zope project. Like
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[slack-daemon]_, it differs from this specification because it is
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used to run another program as a daemon process.
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* The Python library `daemon` [clapper-daemon]_ is (according to its
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homepage) no longer maintained. As of version 1.0.1, it implements
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the basic steps from [stevens]_.
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* The `daemonize` library [seutter-daemonize]_ also implements the
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basic steps from [stevens]_.
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* Ray Burr's `daemon.py` module [burr-daemon]_ provides the [stevens]_
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procedure as well as PID file handling and redirection of output to
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syslog.
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* Twisted [twisted]_ includes, perhaps unsurprisingly, an
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implementation of a process daemonisation API that is integrated
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with the rest of the Twisted framework; it differs significantly
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from the API in this PEP.
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* The Python `initd` library [dagitses-initd]_, which uses
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[clapper-daemon]_, implements an equivalent of Unix `initd(8)` for
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controlling a daemon process.
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==========
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References
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==========
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.. [stevens]
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`Unix Network Programming`, W. Richard Stevens, 1994 Prentice
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Hall.
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.. [slack-daemon]
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The (non-Python) “libslack” implementation of a `daemon` tool
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`<http://www.libslack.org/daemon/>`_ by “raf” <raf@raf.org>.
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.. [python-daemon]
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The `python-daemon` library
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`<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/python-daemon/>`_ by Ben Finney et
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al.
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.. [cookbook-66012]
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Python Cookbook recipe 66012, “Fork a daemon process on Unix”
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`<http://code.activestate.com/recipes/66012/>`_.
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.. [cookbook-278731]
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Python Cookbook recipe 278731, “Creating a daemon the Python way”
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`<http://code.activestate.com/recipes/278731/>`_.
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.. [bda.daemon]
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The `bda.daemon` library
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`<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/bda.daemon/>`_ by Robert
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Niederreiter et al.
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.. [zdaemon]
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The `zdaemon` tool `<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/zdaemon/>`_ by
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Guido van Rossum et al.
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.. [clapper-daemon]
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The `daemon` library `<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/daemon/>`_ by
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Brian Clapper.
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.. [seutter-daemonize]
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The `daemonize` library `<http://daemonize.sourceforge.net/>`_ by
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Jerry Seutter.
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.. [burr-daemon]
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The `daemon.py` module
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`<http://www.nightmare.com/~ryb/code/daemon.py>`_ by Ray Burr.
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.. [twisted]
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The `Twisted` application framework
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`<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Twisted/>`_ by Glyph Lefkowitz et
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al.
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.. [dagitses-initd]
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The Python `initd` library `<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/initd/>`_
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by Michael Andreas Dagitses.
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=========
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Copyright
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=========
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This work is hereby placed in the public domain. To the extent that
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placing a work in the public domain is not legally possible, the
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copyright holder hereby grants to all recipients of this work all
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rights and freedoms that would otherwise be restricted by copyright.
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..
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Local variables:
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mode: rst
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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vim: filetype=rst fileencoding=utf-8 :
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