'How do I get my Golang web server to run in the background?

I have recently completed the Wiki web development tutorial (http://golang.org/doc/articles/wiki/). I had tons of fun and I would like to experiment more with the net/http package.

However, I noticed that when I run the wiki from a console, the wiki takes over the console. If I close the console terminal or stop the process with CTRL+Z then the server stops.

How can I get the server to run in the background? I think the term for that is running in a daemon.

I'm running this on Ubuntu 12.04. Thanks for any help.



Solution 1:[1]

You could use Supervisord to manage your process.

Solution 2:[2]

Ubuntu? Use upstart.

Create a file in /etc/init for your job, named your-service-name.conf

start on net-device-up
exec /path/to/file --option

You can use start your-service-name, as well as: stop, restart, status

Solution 3:[3]

This will configure your service using systemd, not a comprehensive tutorial but rather a quick jump-start of how this can be set up.

Content of your app.service file

[Unit]  
Description=deploy-webhook service
After=network.target

[Service]      
ExecStart=/usr/bin/go webhook.go    
WorkingDirectory=/etc/deploy-webhook

User=app-svc      
Group=app-svc

Restart=always    
RestartSec=10    
KillSignal=SIGINT

SyslogIdentifier=deploy-webhook-service      
PrivateTmp=true  

Environment=APP_PARAM_1=ParamA
Environment=APP_PARAM_2=ParamB

[Install]      
WantedBy=multi-user.target  

Starting the Service

sudo systemctl start deploy-webhook.service

Service Status

sudo systemctl status deploy-webhook.service

Logs

journalctl -u deploy-webhook -e

Solution 4:[4]

After you press ctrl+z (putting the current task to sleep) you can run the command bg in the terminal (stands for background) to let the latest task continue running in the background.

When you need to, run fg to get back to the task.

To get the same result, you can add to your command & at the end to start it in the background.

Solution 5:[5]

To add to Greg's answer:

To run the Go App as a service you need to create a new service unit file.

However, the App needs to know where Go is installed. The easiest way to lookup that location is by running this command:

which go

which gives you an output like this:

/usr/local/go/bin/go

With this piece of information, you can create the systemd service file. Create a file named providus-app.service in the /etc/systemd/system/ using the command below:

sudo touch /etc/systemd/system/providus-app.service

Next open the newly created file:

sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/providus-app.service

Paste the following configuration into your service file:

[Unit]
Description=Providus App Service
After=network.target

[Service]
Type=forking

User=deploy
Group=deploy

ExecStart=/usr/local/go/bin/go run main.go
WorkingDirectory=/home/deploy/providus-app

Restart=always
RestartSec=10
KillSignal=SIGINT

SyslogIdentifier=providus-app-service
PrivateTmp=true

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

When you are finished, save and close the file.

Next, reload the systemd daemon so that it knows about our service file:

sudo systemctl daemon-reload

Start the Providus App service by typing:

sudo systemctl restart providus-app

Double-check that it started without errors by typing:

sudo systemctl status providus-app

And then enable the Providus App service file so that Providus App automatically starts at boot, that is, it can start on its own whenever the server restarts:

sudo systemctl enable providus-app

This creates a multi-user.target symlink in /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/providus-app.service for the /etc/systemd/system/providus-app.service file that you created.

To check logs:

sudo journalctl -u providus-app

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 Jacques René Mesrine
Solution 2 lunixbochs
Solution 3 Greg
Solution 4 Misha Akopov
Solution 5 Promise Preston