tomo-plugin-good_job

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This is a tomo plugin that provides tasks for managing good_job via systemd, based on the recommendations in the good_job documentation. This plugin assumes that you are also using the tomo rbenv and env plugins, and that you are using a systemd-based Linux distribution like Ubuntu 18 LTS.


Installation

Run:

$ gem install tomo-plugin-good_job

Or add it to your Gemfile:

gem "tomo-plugin-good_job"

Then add the following to .tomo/config.rb:

plugin "good_job"

setup do
  # ...
  run "good_job:setup_systemd"
end

deploy do
  # ...
  # Place this task at *after* core:symlink_current
  run "good_job:restart"
end

enable-linger

This plugin installs good_job as a user-level service using systemctl --user. This allows good_job to be installed, started, stopped, and restarted without a root user or sudo. However, when provisioning the host you must make sure to run the following command as root to allow the good_job process to continue running even after the tomo deploy user disconnects:

# run as root
$ loginctl enable-linger <DEPLOY_USER>

Settings

Name Purpose
good_job_systemd_service Name of the systemd unit that will be used to manage good*job
Default: "good_job*%{application}.service"
good_job_systemd_service_path Location where the systemd unit will be installed
Default: ".config/systemd/user/%{good_job_systemd_service}"
good_job_systemd_service_template_path Local path to the ERB template that will be used to create the systemd unit
Default: service.erb

Tasks

good_job:setup_systemd

Configures systemd to manage good_job. This means that good_job will automatically be restarted if it crashes, or if the host is rebooted. This task essentially does two things:

  1. Installs a good_job.service systemd unit
  2. Enables it using systemctl --user enable

Note that these units will be installed and run for the deploy user. You can use :good_job_systemd_service_template_path to provide your own template and customize how good_job and systemd are configured.

good_job:setup_systemd is intended for use as a setup task. It must be run before good_job can be started during a deploy.

good_job:restart

Gracefully restarts the good_job service via systemd, or starts it if it isn't running already. Equivalent to:

systemctl --user restart good_job.service

good_job:start

Starts the good_job service via systemd, if it isn't running already. Equivalent to:

systemctl --user start good_job.service

good_job:stop

Stops the good_job service via systemd. Equivalent to:

systemctl --user stop good_job.service

good_job:status

Prints the status of the good_job systemd service. Equivalent to:

systemctl --user status good_job.service

good_job:log

Uses journalctl (part of systemd) to view the log output of the good_job service. This task is intended for use as a run task and accepts command-line arguments. The arguments are passed through to the journalctl command. For example:

$ tomo run -- good_job:log -f

Will run this remote script:

journalctl -q --user-unit=good_job.service -f

Support

If you want to report a bug, or have ideas, feedback or questions about the gem, let me know via GitHub issues and I will do my best to provide a helpful answer. Happy hacking!

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of conduct

Everyone interacting in this project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

Contribution guide

Pull requests are welcome! Thanks @mattbrictson for Tomo 🙏