Create a daemon with double-fork in Ruby

JasonSmith picture JasonSmith · Nov 16, 2009 · Viewed 8k times · Source

What is the proper way to create a well-behaved Unix or Linux daemon in Ruby?

What is the definition of a well-behaved daemon anyway, and how would one write such a program in Ruby?

Answer

JasonSmith picture JasonSmith · Nov 16, 2009

According to Stevens's Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment chapter 13, this is the procedure to make a well-behaved Unix daemon:

  1. Fork and have the parent exit. This makes the shell or boot script think the command is done. Also, the child process is guaranteed not to be a process group leader (a prerequisite for setsid next)
  2. Call setsid to create a new session. This does three things:
    1. The process becomes a session leader of a new session
    2. The process becomes the process group leader of a new process group
    3. The process has no controlling terminal
  3. Optionally fork again and have the parent exit. This guarantes that the daemon is not a session leader nor can it acquire a controlling terminal (under SVR4)
  4. Change the current working directory to / to avoid interfering with mounting and unmounting
  5. Set file mode creation mask to 000 to allow creation of files with any required permission later.
  6. Close unneeded file descriptors inherited from the parent (there is no controlling terminal anyway): stdout, stderr, and stdin.

Nowadays there is a file to track the PID which is used heavily by Linux distribution boot scripts. Be sure to write out the PID of the grandchild, either the return value of the second fork (step 3) or the value of getpid() after step 3.

Here is a Ruby implementation, mostly translated from the book, but with the double-fork and writing out the daemon PID.

# Example double-forking Unix daemon initializer.

raise 'Must run as root' if Process.euid != 0

raise 'First fork failed' if (pid = fork) == -1
exit unless pid.nil?

Process.setsid
raise 'Second fork failed' if (pid = fork) == -1
exit unless pid.nil?
puts "Daemon pid: #{Process.pid}" # Or save it somewhere, etc.

Dir.chdir '/'
File.umask 0000

STDIN.reopen '/dev/null'
STDOUT.reopen '/dev/null', 'a'
STDERR.reopen STDOUT