bigbluebutton-Github/labs/bbb-callback/bbb-callback.sh

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2013-09-13 23:34:51 +08:00
#!/bin/bash
#
# An example init script for running a Node.js process as a service
# using Forever as the process monitor. For more configuration options
# associated with Forever, see: https://github.com/nodejitsu/forever
#
# You will need to set the environment variables noted below to conform to
# your use case, and change the init info comment block.
#
# This was written for Debian distributions such as Ubuntu, but should still
# work on RedHat, Fedora, or other RPM-based distributions, since none
# of the built-in service functions are used. If you do adapt it to a RPM-based
# system, you'll need to replace the init info comment block with a chkconfig
# comment block.
#
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: bbb-callback
# Required-Start: $syslog $remote_fs
# Required-Stop: $syslog $remote_fs
# Should-Start: $local_fs
# Should-Stop: $local_fs
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Short-Description: BigBlueButton Callback Application
# Description: BigBlueButton application that callback URLs registered to receive events.
### END INIT INFO
#
# Based on:
# https://gist.github.com/3748766
# https://github.com/hectorcorrea/hectorcorrea.com/blob/master/etc/forever-initd-hectorcorrea.sh
# https://www.exratione.com/2011/07/running-a-nodejs-server-as-a-service-using-forever/
# Source function library. Note that this isn't used here, but remains to be
# uncommented by those who want to edit this script to add more functionality.
# Note that this is Ubuntu-specific. The scripts and script location are different on
# RPM-based distributions.
# . /lib/lsb/init-functions
# The example environment variables below assume that Node.js is
# installed into /home/node/local/node by building from source as outlined
# here:
# https://www.exratione.com/2011/07/running-a-nodejs-server-as-a-service-using-forever/
#
# It should be easy enough to adapt to the paths to be appropriate to a
# package installation, but note that the packages available for Ubuntu in
# the default repositories are far behind the times. Most users will be
# building from source to get a more recent Node.js version.
#
# An application name to display in echo text.
# NAME="My Application"
# The full path to the directory containing the node and forever binaries.
# NODE_BIN_DIR=/home/node/local/node/bin
# Set the NODE_PATH to the Node.js main node_modules directory.
# NODE_PATH=/home/node/local/node/lib/node_modules
# The directory containing the application start Javascript file.
# APPLICATION_DIRECTORY=/home/node/my-application
# The application start Javascript filename.
# APPLICATION_START=start-my-application.js
# Process ID file path.
# PIDFILE=/var/run/my-application.pid
# Log file path.
# LOGFILE=/var/log/my-application.log
#
NAME="BBB Calback"
NODE_BIN_DIR=/usr/local/bin
NODE_PATH=/usr/local/lib/node_modules
APPLICATION_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/bigbluebutton/bbb-callback
APPLICATION_START=app.js
PIDFILE=/var/run/bbb-callback.pid
LOGFILE=/var/log/bbb-callback.log
# Add node to the path for situations in which the environment is passed.
PATH=$NODE_BIN_DIR:$PATH
# Export all environment variables that must be visible for the Node.js
# application process forked by Forever. It will not see any of the other
# variables defined in this script.
export NODE_PATH=$NODE_PATH
start() {
echo "Starting $NAME"
# We're calling forever directly without using start-stop-daemon for the
# sake of simplicity when it comes to environment, and because this way
# the script will work whether it is executed directly or via the service
# utility.
#
# The minUptime and spinSleepTime settings stop Forever from thrashing if
# the application fails immediately on launch. This is generally necessary to
# avoid loading development servers to the point of failure every time
# someone makes an error in application initialization code, or bringing down
# production servers the same way if a database or other critical service
# suddenly becomes inaccessible.
#
# The pidfile contains the child process pid, not the forever process pid.
# We're only using it as a marker for whether or not the process is
# running.
forever --pidFile $PIDFILE --sourceDir $APPLICATION_DIRECTORY \
-a -l $LOGFILE --minUptime 5000 --spinSleepTime 2000 \
start $APPLICATION_START &
RETVAL=$?
}
stop() {
if [ -f $PIDFILE ]; then
echo "Shutting down $NAME"
# Tell Forever to stop the process. Note that doing it this way means
# that each application that runs as a service must have a different
# start file name, regardless of which directory it is in.
forever stop $APPLICATION_START
# Get rid of the pidfile, since Forever won't do that.
rm -f $PIDFILE
RETVAL=$?
else
echo "$NAME is not running."
RETVAL=0
fi
}
restart() {
echo "Restarting $NAME"
stop
start
}
status() {
echo "Status for $NAME:"
# This is taking the lazy way out on status, as it will return a list of
# all running Forever processes. You get to figure out what you want to
# know from that information.
#
# On Ubuntu, this isn't even necessary. To find out whether the service is
# running, use "service my-application status" which bypasses this script
# entirely provided you used the service utility to start the process.
forever list
RETVAL=$?
}
case "$1" in
start)
start
;;
stop)
stop
;;
status)
status
;;
restart)
restart
;;
*)
echo "Usage: {start|stop|status|restart}"
exit 1
;;
esac
exit $RETVAL