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NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | COMMANDS | OPTIONS | EXIT STATUS | EXAMPLE | COLOPHON |
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start-stop-daemon(8) dpkg suite start-stop-daemon(8)
start-stop-daemon - start and stop system daemon programs
start-stop-daemon [option...] command
start-stop-daemon is used to control the creation and termination of
system-level processes. Using one of the matching options,
start-stop-daemon can be configured to find existing instances of a
running process.
Note: unless --pid or --pidfile are specified, start-stop-daemon
behaves similar to killall(1). start-stop-daemon will scan the
process table looking for any processes which match the process name,
parent pid, uid, and/or gid (if specified). Any matching process will
prevent --start from starting the daemon. All matching processes will
be sent the TERM signal (or the one specified via --signal or
--retry) if --stop is specified. For daemons which have long-lived
children which need to live through a --stop, you must specify a
pidfile.
-S, --start [--] arguments
Check for the existence of a specified process. If such a
process exists, start-stop-daemon does nothing, and exits with
error status 1 (0 if --oknodo is specified). If such a
process does not exist, it starts an instance, using either
the executable specified by --exec or, if specified, by
--startas. Any arguments given after -- on the command line
are passed unmodified to the program being started.
-K, --stop
Checks for the existence of a specified process. If such a
process exists, start-stop-daemon sends it the signal
specified by --signal, and exits with error status 0. If such
a process does not exist, start-stop-daemon exits with error
status 1 (0 if --oknodo is specified). If --retry is
specified, then start-stop-daemon will check that the
process(es) have terminated.
-T, --status
Check for the existence of a specified process, and returns an
exit status code, according to the LSB Init Script Actions
(since version 1.16.1).
-H, --help
Show usage information and exit.
-V, --version
Show the program version and exit.
Matching options
--pid pid
Check for a process with the specified pid (since version
1.17.6). The pid must be a number greater than 0.
--ppid ppid
Check for a process with the specified parent pid ppid (since
version 1.17.7). The ppid must be a number greater than 0.
-p, --pidfile pid-file
Check whether a process has created the file pid-file. Note:
using this matching option alone might cause unintended
processes to be acted on, if the old process terminated
without being able to remove the pid-file.
-x, --exec executable
Check for processes that are instances of this executable. The
executable argument should be an absolute pathname. Note: this
might not work as intended with interpreted scripts, as the
executable will point to the interpreter. Take into account
processes running from inside a chroot will also be matched,
so other match restrictions might be needed.
-n, --name process-name
Check for processes with the name process-name. The process-
name is usually the process filename, but it could have been
changed by the process itself. Note: on most systems this
information is retrieved from the process comm name from the
kernel, which tends to have a relatively short length limit
(assuming more than 15 characters is non-portable).
-u, --user username|uid
Check for processes owned by the user specified by username or
uid. Note: using this matching option alone will cause all
processes matching the user to be acted on.
Generic options
-g, --group group|gid
Change to group or gid when starting the process.
-s, --signal signal
With --stop, specifies the signal to send to processes being
stopped (default TERM).
-R, --retry timeout|schedule
With --stop, specifies that start-stop-daemon is to check
whether the process(es) do finish. It will check repeatedly
whether any matching processes are running, until none are. If
the processes do not exit it will then take further action as
determined by the schedule.
If timeout is specified instead of schedule, then the schedule
signal/timeout/KILL/timeout is used, where signal is the
signal specified with --signal.
schedule is a list of at least two items separated by slashes
(/); each item may be -signal-number or [-]signal-name, which
means to send that signal, or timeout, which means to wait
that many seconds for processes to exit, or forever, which
means to repeat the rest of the schedule forever if necessary.
If the end of the schedule is reached and forever is not
specified, then start-stop-daemon exits with error status 2.
If a schedule is specified, then any signal specified with
--signal is ignored.
-a, --startas pathname
With --start, start the process specified by pathname. If not
specified, defaults to the argument given to --exec.
-t, --test
Print actions that would be taken and set appropriate return
value, but take no action.
-o, --oknodo
Return exit status 0 instead of 1 if no actions are (would be)
taken.
-q, --quiet
Do not print informational messages; only display error
messages.
-c, --chuid username|uid[:group|gid]
Change to this username/uid before starting the process. You
can also specify a group by appending a :, then the group or
gid in the same way as you would for the chown(1) command
(user:group). If a user is specified without a group, the
primary GID for that user is used. When using this option you
must realize that the primary and supplemental groups are set
as well, even if the --group option is not specified. The
--group option is only for groups that the user isn't normally
a member of (like adding per process group membership for
generic users like nobody).
-r, --chroot root
Chdir and chroot to root before starting the process. Please
note that the pidfile is also written after the chroot.
-d, --chdir path
Chdir to path before starting the process. This is done after
the chroot if the -r|--chroot option is set. When not
specified, start-stop-daemon will chdir to the root directory
before starting the process.
-b, --background
Typically used with programs that don't detach on their own.
This option will force start-stop-daemon to fork before
starting the process, and force it into the background.
Warning: start-stop-daemon cannot check the exit status if the
process fails to execute for any reason. This is a last
resort, and is only meant for programs that either make no
sense forking on their own, or where it's not feasible to add
the code for them to do this themselves.
-C, --no-close
Do not close any file descriptor when forcing the daemon into
the background (since version 1.16.5). Used for debugging
purposes to see the process output, or to redirect file
descriptors to log the process output. Only relevant when
using --background.
-N, --nicelevel int
This alters the priority of the process before starting it.
-P, --procsched policy:priority
This alters the process scheduler policy and priority of the
process before starting it (since version 1.15.0). The
priority can be optionally specified by appending a : followed
by the value. The default priority is 0. The currently
supported policy values are other, fifo and rr.
-I, --iosched class:priority
This alters the IO scheduler class and priority of the process
before starting it (since version 1.15.0). The priority can
be optionally specified by appending a : followed by the
value. The default priority is 4, unless class is idle, then
priority will always be 7. The currently supported values for
class are idle, best-effort and real-time.
-k, --umask mask
This sets the umask of the process before starting it (since
version 1.13.22).
-m, --make-pidfile
Used when starting a program that does not create its own pid
file. This option will make start-stop-daemon create the file
referenced with --pidfile and place the pid into it just
before executing the process. Note, the file will only be
removed when stopping the program if --remove-pidfile is used.
Note: This feature may not work in all cases. Most notably
when the program being executed forks from its main process.
Because of this, it is usually only useful when combined with
the --background option.
--remove-pidfile
Used when stopping a program that does not remove its own pid
file (since version 1.17.19). This option will make
start-stop-daemon remove the file referenced with --pidfile
after terminating the process.
-v, --verbose
Print verbose informational messages.
0 The requested action was performed. If --oknodo was specified,
it's also possible that nothing had to be done. This can
happen when --start was specified and a matching process was
already running, or when --stop was specified and there were
no matching processes.
1 If --oknodo was not specified and nothing was done.
2 If --stop and --retry were specified, but the end of the
schedule was reached and the processes were still running.
3 Any other error.
When using the --status command, the following status codes are
returned:
0 Program is running.
1 Program is not running and the pid file exists.
3 Program is not running.
4 Unable to determine program status.
Start the food daemon, unless one is already running (a process named
food, running as user food, with pid in food.pid):
start-stop-daemon --start --oknodo --user food --name food \
--pidfile /run/food.pid --startas /usr/sbin/food \
--chuid food -- --daemon
Send SIGTERM to food and wait up to 5 seconds for it to stop:
start-stop-daemon --stop --oknodo --user food --name food \
--pidfile /run/food.pid --retry 5
Demonstration of a custom schedule for stopping food:
start-stop-daemon --stop --oknodo --user food --name food \
--pidfile /run/food.pid --retry=TERM/30/KILL/5
This page is part of the dpkg (Debian Package Manager) project.
Information about the project can be found at
⟨https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/Dpkg/⟩. If you have a bug report for
this manual page, see
⟨http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=dpkg⟩. This page
was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨git://git.debian.org/git/dpkg/dpkg.git⟩ on 2018-02-02. (At that
time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the repos‐
itory was 2018-01-16.) If you discover any rendering problems in
this HTML version of the page, or you believe there is a better or
more up-to-date source for the page, or you have corrections or
improvements to the information in this COLOPHON (which is not part
of the original manual page), send a mail to man-pages@man7.org
1.18.15-3-ga2ef 1970-01-01 start-stop-daemon(8)