ssm === Yet another service manager. Services -------- A service is a script in the ssm's init.d directory. By default it's /etc/ssm/services for system services and $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/ssm/services for user ones. ## Global settings * `cgroups = 0` — Enable cgroup-related features. ## Service config Mandatory options: * `service_command = /usr/bin/example -a --long-arg "parameter"` Optional settings (incomplete list): * `service_respawn = no` — Restart the service. Takes `no`, `always`, `on-failure` and `on-success`. * `service_workdir = /` * `service_pidfile` — If the service manages its own pidfile, set this. * `service_pidfile_timeout = 15` — How long to wait for the service to create its pidfile. * `service_pidfile_remove_stale = yes` — Remove stale pidfiles before spawning the service process. * `service_logfile_out = $logdir/$service_name.log` — Logfile for output. * `service_logfile_err = $service_logfile_out` — Logfile for stderr. * `service_stop_timeout = 30` — How long to wait after sending the stop command. * `service_ready_timeout = 15` — How long to wait till the service is ready, in seconds. * `service_stop_signal = 15` — Which signal to send to the service when stopping. * `service_reload_signal = 1` — Which signal to send to the service when reloading. * `service_cgroup_exclusive = no` — Refuse to start the service if the cgroup is not empty. * `service_cgroup_wait = no` — Wait on the entire cgroup to die when stopping the service. * `service_cgroup_strict = 1` — Refuse to do anything if the service's recorded PID is both running and not in the service's appropriate cgroup. This usually means you've either found a bug or something bad happened to your system. * `service_cgroup_kill = no` — Kill the entire cgroup when stopping the service. * `service_cgroup_kill_signal = 15` — Which signal to use for that. * `service_cgroup_cleanup = no` — Kill the entire cgroup on watchdog cleanup. Note that it is distinctly not the same as killing the cgroup on stopping. * `service_success_exit = 0` — Array. Which exit codes to treat as successful termination. Only works for managed services (With no custom pidfile). * `service_oneshot = no` — The service is supposed to do something and die instead of daemonizing. * `service_signals_passthru` — Array, empty by default. Which signals should the svc pass directly to the service mainpid. This is dangerous, use with caution.