.. | ||
examples/cmd | ||
img | ||
.travis.yml | ||
command.go | ||
daemon.go | ||
daemon_stub.go | ||
daemon_test.go | ||
daemon_unix.go | ||
LICENSE | ||
lock_file.go | ||
lock_file_darwin.go | ||
lock_file_stub.go | ||
lock_file_test.go | ||
lock_file_unix.go | ||
README.md | ||
signal.go | ||
syscall_dup.go | ||
syscall_dup_arm64.go |
go-daemon
Library for writing system daemons in Go.
Now supported only UNIX-based OS (Windows is not supported). But the library was tested only on Linux and OSX, so that if you have an ability to test the library on other platforms, give me feedback, please (#26).
Please, feel free to send me bug reports and fixes. Many thanks to all contributors.
Features
- Goroutine-safe daemonization;
- Out of box work with pid-files;
- Easy handling of system signals;
- The control of a daemon.
Installation
go get github.com/sevlyar/go-daemon
You can use gopkg.in:
go get gopkg.in/sevlyar/go-daemon.v0
If you want to use the library in production project, please use vendoring, because i can not ensure backward compatibility before release v1.0.
Build
Please keep in mind that if you want to use cross-compilation you should set CGO_ENABLED
environment variable to 1
because cgo is turned off by default when cross-compiling.
Examples
Documentation
godoc.org/github.com/sevlyar/go-daemon
How it works
We can not use fork
syscall in Golang's runtime, because child process doesn't inherit
threads and goroutines in that case. The library uses a simple trick: it runs its own copy with
a mark - a predefined environment variable. Availability of the variable for the process means
an execution in the child's copy. So that if the mark is not setted - the library executes
parent's operations and runs its own copy with mark, and if the mark is setted - the library
executes child's operations:
func main() {
Pre()
context := new(Context)
child, _ := context.Reborn()
if child != nil {
PostParent()
} else {
defer context.Release()
PostChild()
}
}