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README.md |
Puma as a service using Upstart
Manage multiple Puma servers as services on the same box using Ubuntu upstart.
Installation
# Copy the scripts to services directory
sudo cp puma.conf puma-manager.conf /etc/init
# Create an empty configuration file
sudo touch /etc/puma.conf
Managing the jungle
Puma apps are referenced in /etc/puma.conf by default. Add each app's path as a new line, e.g.:
/home/apps/my-cool-ruby-app
/home/apps/another-app/current
Start the jungle running:
sudo start puma-manager
This script will run at boot time.
Start a single puma like this:
sudo start puma app=/path/to/app
Logs
Everything is logged by upstart, defaulting to /var/log/upstart
.
Each puma instance is named after its directory, so for an app called /home/apps/my-app
the log file would be /var/log/upstart/puma-_home_apps_my-app.log
.
Conventions
- The script expects:
- a config file to exist under
config/puma.rb
in your app. E.g.:/home/apps/my-app/config/puma.rb
. - a temporary folder to put the PID, socket and state files to exist called
tmp/puma
. E.g.:/home/apps/my-app/tmp/puma
. Puma will take care of the files for you.
- a config file to exist under
You can always change those defaults by editing the scripts.
Here's what a minimal app's config file should have
pidfile "/path/to/app/tmp/puma/pid"
state_path "/path/to/app/tmp/puma/state"
activate_control_app
Before starting...
You need to customise puma.conf
to:
- Set the right user your app should be running on unless you want root to execute it!
- Look for
setuid apps
andsetgid apps
, uncomment those lines and replaceapps
to whatever your deployment user is. - Replace
apps
on the paths (or set the right paths to your user's home) everywhere else.
- Look for
- Uncomment the source lines for
rbenv
orrvm
support unless you use a system wide installation of Ruby.