How to configure multiple workers for laravel queue with systemd [duplicate]

Well, assuming that the only thing changing per unit file is the remote.example.com part, you can use an Instantiated Service.

From the systemd.unit man page:

Optionally, units may be instantiated from a template file at runtime. This allows creation of multiple units from a single configuration file. If systemd looks for a unit configuration file, it will first search for the literal unit name in the file system. If that yields no success and the unit name contains an "@" character, systemd will look for a unit template that shares the same name but with the instance string (i.e. the part between the "@" character and the suffix) removed. Example: if a service [email protected] is requested and no file by that name is found, systemd will look for [email protected] and instantiate a service from that configuration file if it is found.

Basically, you create a single unit file, which contains a variable (usually %i) where the differences occur and then they get linked when you "enable" that service.

For example, I have a unit file called /etc/systemd/system/[email protected] that looks like this:

[Unit]
Description=AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on %i
After=network.target

[Service]
Environment=AUTOSSH_GATETIME=30 AUTOSSH_LOGFILE=/var/log/autossh/%i.log AUTOSSH_PIDFILE=/var/run/autossh.%i.pid
PIDFile=/var/run/autossh.%i.pid
#Type=forking
ExecStart=/usr/bin/autossh -M 40000 -NR 5000:127.0.0.1:5000 -i /opt/ServiceABC/.ssh/id_rsa_ServiceABC -l ServiceABC %i

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Which I've then enabled

[user@anotherhost ~]$ sudo systemctl enable [email protected]
ln -s '/etc/systemd/system/[email protected]' '/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/[email protected]'

And can intereact with

[user@anotherhost ~]$ sudo systemctl start [email protected]
[user@anotherhost ~]$ sudo systemctl status [email protected]
[email protected] - AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on somehost.example
   Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/[email protected]; enabled)
   Active: active (running) since Tue 2015-10-20 13:19:01 EDT; 17s ago
 Main PID: 32524 (autossh)
   CGroup: /system.slice/system-autossh.slice/[email protected]
           ├─32524 /usr/bin/autossh -M 40000 -NR 5000:127.0.0.1:5000 -i /opt/ServiceABC/.ssh/id_rsa_ServiceABC -l ServiceABC somehost.example.com
           └─32525 /usr/bin/ssh -L 40000:127.0.0.1:40000 -R 40000:127.0.0.1:40001 -NR 5000:127.0.0.1:5000 -i /opt/ServiceABC/.ssh/id_rsa_ServiceABC -l ServiceABC somehost.example.com

Oct 20 13:19:01 anotherhost.example.com systemd[1]: Started AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on somehost.example.com.
[user@anotherhost ~]$ sudo systemctl status [email protected]
[user@anotherhost ~]$ sudo systemctl status [email protected]
[email protected] - AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on somehost.example.com
   Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/[email protected]; enabled)
   Active: inactive (dead) since Tue 2015-10-20 13:24:10 EDT; 2s ago
  Process: 32524 ExecStart=/usr/bin/autossh -M 40000 -NR 5000:127.0.0.1:5000 -i /opt/ServiceABC/.ssh/id_rsa_ServiceABC -l ServiceABC %i (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
 Main PID: 32524 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)

Oct 20 13:19:01 anotherhost.example.com systemd[1]: Started AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on somehost.example.com.
Oct 20 13:24:10 anotherhost.example.com systemd[1]: Stopping AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on somehost.example.com...
Oct 20 13:24:10 anotherhost.example.com systemd[1]: Stopped AutoSSH service for ServiceABC on somehost.example.com.

As you can see, all instances of %i in the unit file get replaced with somehost.example.com.

There's a bunch more specifiers that you can use in a unit file though, but I find %i to work best in cases like this.


Here is a python example, which was what I was looking for. The @ in the service filename lets you start N processes:

$ cat /etc/systemd/system/[email protected]

[Unit]
Description=manages my worker service, instance %i
After=multi-user.target

[Service]
PermissionsStartOnly=true
Type=idle
User=root
ExecStart=/usr/local/virtualenvs/bin/python /path/to/my/script.py
Restart=always
TimeoutStartSec=10
RestartSec=10

Various methods to call it

Enabling various counts for example:

  • Enable 30 workers:

    sudo systemctl enable my-worker\@{1..30}.service
    
  • Enable 2 workers:

    sudo systemctl enable my-worker\@{1..2}.service
    

Then be sure to reload:

sudo systemctl daemon-reload

Now you can start/stop then in various ways:

  • Start 1:

    sudo systemctl start [email protected]
    
  • Start Multiple:

    sudo systemctl start my-worker@{1..2}
    
  • Stop Multiple:

    sudo systemctl stop my-worker@{1..2}
    
  • Check status:

    sudo systemctl status my-worker@1
    

UPDATE: To manage instances as one service, you can do something like this:

/etc/systemd/system/[email protected]:

[Unit]
Description=manage worker instances as a service, instance %i
Requires=some-worker.service
Before=some-worker.service
BindsTo=some-worker.service

[Service]
PermissionsStartOnly=true
Type=idle
User=root
#EnvironmentFile=/etc/profile.d/optional_envvars.sh
ExecStart=/usr/local/virtualenvs/bin/python /path/to/my/script.py
TimeoutStartSec=10
RestartSec=10

[Install]
WantedBy=some-worker.service

/usr/bin/some-worker-start.sh:

#!/bin/bash
systemctl start some-worker@{1..10}

/etc/systemd/system/some-worker.service:

[Unit]
Description=manages some worker instances as a service, instance

[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/bin/sh /usr/bin/some-worker-start.sh
RemainAfterExit=yes

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

And now you can manage all instances with sudo systemctl some-worker (start|restart|stop)

Here is some boilerplate for your script.py:

#!/usr/bin/env python

import logging


def worker_loop():
    shutdown = False
    while True:

        try:
            if shutdown:
                break

            # Your execution logic here.
            # Common logic - i.e. consume from a queue, perform some work, ack message
            print("hello world")

        except (IOError, KeyboardInterrupt):
            shutdown = True
            logging.info("shutdown received - processing will halt when jobs complete")
        except Exception as e:
            logging.exception("unhandled exception on shutdown. {}".format(e))


if __name__ == '__main__':
    worker_loop()

GregL's answer helped me a great deal. Here is an example of a unit template I used in my code using the example above for a gearman job server. I made a shell script that lets me create X amount of "workers" using this one template.

[Unit]
Description=az gearman worker
After=gearman-job-server.service

[Service]
PIDFile=/var/run/gearman_worker_az%i.pid
Type=simple
User=www-data
WorkingDirectory=/var/www/mysite.com/jobs/
ExecStart=/usr/bin/php -f gearman_worker_az.php > /dev/null 2>&1
Restart=on-success
KillMode=process

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target