restarting apache via service command :
service httpd restart
Stopping httpd: [ OK ]
Starting httpd: [ OK ]
I want to be able to get the same output without using the "service" command.
the following command works but does not print anything.
/usr/sbin/httpd -k restart
The "service" command runs the /etc/init.d/httpd script, this script restarts httpd and prints the info.
With /usr/sbin/httpd -k restart, you are restarting httpd without printing anything.
I want to be able to get the same output without using the "service" command.
Option 1
Run the httpd init script:
/etc/init.d/httpd restart
Option 2
You could create a script like the following:
#!/bin/bash
echo "Restarting httpd..."
/usr/sbin/httpd -k restart
Name it 'restart_httpd.sh', for example, and make it executable:
chmod +x restart_httpd.sh
Run it:
./restart_httpd.sh
Related
Last time I try add new domain on localhost and I leave it on few weeks so now I try run my apache this command /etc/init.d/apache2 start and I get error
[....] Starting apache2 (via systemctl): apache2.serviceJob for apache2.service failed. See "systemctl status apache2.service" and "journalctl -xe" for details.
failed!
If i tried to do reinstall apache2 but it is still not work.
I just did these two lines.It worked.
Two web servers cannot be active on the one port at the same time
this code for apache & nginx:
or
if error journalctl -xe used this code
sudo apt-get install psmisc
sudo lsof -t -i tcp:80 -s tcp:listen | sudo xargs kill
Virtual Host configuration might cause this error
I solved this same problem by configuring my virtual host .conf files properly.
I created a virtual host & then removed the exapmle.conf file form /etc/apache2/sites-avalable/ but I didn't deleted the examle.conf file from /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/ for this reason i was getting this error.
Then I removed the example.conf file from both the folders( ../sites-enabled & ../sites-available ) and solved this issue.
If you tried to setup any virtual host recently, then try this solution.
Best of Luck
Kill the running process on the port. Hope it will work!
sudo apt-get install psmisc
sudo fuser 80/tcp
sudo lsof -i tcp:80
sudo lsof -i tcp:80 -s tcp:listen
sudo lsof -t -i tcp:80 -s tcp:listen | sudo xargs kill
Go
sudo nano /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
remove this line:
Include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
Then
service apache2 start/restart
This problem may be a result of some configuration files in apache missing. One of the solutions would be to purge the apache2 file.
You can type:
sudo apt-get purge apache2
Then reinstall apache2 by typing:
sudo apt-get install apache2
As stated in the error message, we just have to execute :
systemctl status apache2.service
or
journalctl -xe
And you will have more detail about the error (line of the error, or command misspelled, or module not included in the configuration, ...) :
for example you can have following detail Invalid command 'SSLEngine', perhaps misspelled or defined by a module not included in the server configuration ==> you then need to execute a2enmod ssl, and then execute service apache2 restart
Also I notice a difference between service apache2 reload and service apache2 restart commands. In case of persisting errors you should execute service apache2 restart, and then execute journalctl -xe.
You type
sudo netstat -pant
You check are you using port 80. If used, `
sudo service 'service_name' stop
and
sudo service apache2 start
The problem is because some configuration files are deleted.
You can use the following command to replace configuration files that have been deleted, without purging the package:
sudo apt-get -o DPkg::Options::="--force-confmiss" --reinstall install apache2
execute sudo service apache2 status and check the result. it might be trying to bind to a port that is already in use
I'm running a Docker container with CoreOS which uses Debian latest as a base and has various packages installed including supervisor and apache2. I can start and successfully run apache using the following command:
# /usr/bin/pidproxy /var/run/apache2.pid /bin/bash -c "source /etc/apache2/envvars && /usr/sbin/apache2 -DFOREGROUND -k start"
However, when I stick this command in a supervisor config file:
[program:apache2]
command=/usr/bin/pidproxy /var/run/apache2.pid /bin/bash -c "source /etc/apache2/envvars && /usr/sbin/apache2 -DFOREGROUND -k start"
redirect_stderr=true
and do this:
# supervisorctl start apache2
I get back this response:
apache2: ERROR (abnormal termination)
Looking at the supervisor process log file I see the help output from the apache2 command, as if it had been called like so apache2 -h. I have no idea why a command which runs when executed on the command line as root (ssh into the container) would not work when verbatim executed by supervisorctl (run as root).
Any point in the right direction would be greatly appreciated.
Not really sure why, but adding quotes to my option values seems to have done the trick, and allowed me to use apachectl. Must be something with the context in which the command is interpreted, whatever supervisor is doing vs input from a bash prompt. Here's my working config file:
[program:apache2]
command=apachectl -D "FOREGROUND" -k start
redirect_stderr=true
You really want to use this. If you don't use pidproxy, a supervisorctl stop apache will not kill all it's children.
This will also make sure that the container will quit when it gets a SIGTERM instead of waiting for a SIGKILL.
[program:apache]
command=/usr/bin/pidproxy /var/run/apache2/apache2.pid /bin/bash -c "/usr/sbin/apache2ctl -D FOREGROUND"
autorestart=true
This is what works for me (using an ubuntu base image, but that should not matter):
Dockerfile:
# Pull Ubuntu as base image
FROM dockerfile/ubuntu
...
# Install supervisor to allow starting mutliple processes
RUN apt-get -y install supervisor && \
mkdir -p /var/log/supervisor && \
mkdir -p /etc/supervisor/conf.d
RUN mkdir /var/log/supervisord
# Add supervisor configuration
ADD etc/supervisor/supervisor.conf /etc/supervisor.conf
# Install Apache and enable CGI
RUN apt-get install -y apache2
ADD etc/apache/000-default.conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/000-default.conf
RUN a2enmod cgi
....
supervisor.conf
[supervisord]
; supervisord log file
logfile=/var/log/supervisord/supervisord.log
; info, debug, warn, trace
loglevel=debug
; pidfile location
pidfile=/var/run/supervisord.pid
; run supervisord as a daemon
nodaemon=false
; number of startup file descriptors
minfds=1024
; number of process descriptors
minprocs=200
; default user
user=root
; where child log files will live
childlogdir=/var/log/supervisord/
[unix_http_server]
file=/var/run/supervisor.sock ; (the path to the socket file)
; the below section must remain in the config file for RPC
; (supervisorctl/web interface) to work, additional interfaces may be
; added by defining them in separate rpcinterface: sections
[rpcinterface:supervisor]
supervisor.rpcinterface_factory = supervisor.rpcinterface:make_main_rpcinterface
[supervisorctl]
serverurl=unix:///var/run/supervisor.sock ; use a unix:// URL for a unix socket
; Apache server
[program:apache2]
command=/usr/sbin/apache2ctl -D FOREGROUND
environment=APACHE_LOG_DIR=/var/log/apache2
redirect_stderr=true
In CentOS apache is Called httpd not apache2
Your supervisor conf file will need to be updated for CentOS
/usr/sbin/httpd is the program location.
[program:apache2]
command=/usr/bin/pidproxy /var/run/httpd.pid /bin/bash -c "/usr/sbin/httpd -DFOREGROUND -k start"
redirect_stderr=true
The Redis startup script is supposed to create a pid file at startup, but I've confirmed all the settings I can find, and no pid file is ever created.
I installed redis by:
$ yum install redis
$ chkconfig redis on
$ service redis start
In my config file (/etc/redis.conf) I checked to make sure these were enabled:
daemonize yes
pidfile /var/run/redis/redis.pid
And in the startup script (/etc/init.d/redis) there is:
exec="/usr/sbin/$name"
pidfile="/var/run/redis/redis.pid"
REDIS_CONFIG="/etc/redis.conf"
[ -e /etc/sysconfig/redis ] && . /etc/sysconfig/redis
lockfile=/var/lock/subsys/redis
start() {
[ -f $REDIS_CONFIG ] || exit 6
[ -x $exec ] || exit 5
echo -n $"Starting $name: "
daemon --user ${REDIS_USER-redis} "$exec $REDIS_CONFIG"
retval=$?
echo
[ $retval -eq 0 ] && touch $lockfile
return $retval
}
stop() {
echo -n $"Stopping $name: "
killproc -p $pidfile $name
retval=$?
echo
[ $retval -eq 0 ] && rm -f $lockfile
return $retval
}
These are the settings that came by default with the install. Any idea why no pid file is created? I need to use it for Monit.
(The system is RHEL 6.4 btw)
For those experiencing on Debian buster:
Editing
nano /etc/systemd/system/redis.service
and adding this line below redis [Service]
ExecStartPost=/bin/sh -c "echo $MAINPID > /var/run/redis/redis.pid"
It suppose to look like this:
[Service]
Type=forking
ExecStart=/usr/bin/redis-server /etc/redis/redis.conf
ExecStop=/bin/kill -s TERM $MAINPID
ExecStartPost=/bin/sh -c "echo $MAINPID > /var/run/redis/redis.pid"
PIDFile=/run/redis/redis-server.pid
then:
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl restart redis.service
Check redis.service status:
sudo systemctl status redis.service
The pid file now should appear.
On my Ubuntu 18.04, I was getting the same error.
Error reported by redis (on /var/log/redis/redis-server.log):
# Creating Server TCP listening socket ::1:6379: bind: Cannot assign requested address
This is because I've disabled IPv6 on this host and redis-server package (version 5:4.0.9-1) for Ubuntu comes with:
bind 127.0.0.1 ::1
Editing /etc/redis/redis.conf and removing the ::1 address solves the problem. Example:
bind 127.0.0.1
Edit: As pointed out in the comments (thanks to #nicholas-vasilaki and #tommyalvarez), by default redis only allows connections from localhost. Commenting all the line, using:
# bind 127.0.0.1 ::1
works, but makes redis listen from the network (not only from localhost).
More details can be found in redis configuration file.
Problem was that the user redis did not have permission to create the pid file (or directory it was in). Fix:
sudo mkdir /var/run/redis
sudo chown redis /var/run/redis
Then I killed and restarted redis and sure enough, there was redis.pid
In CentOs 7 i need to add to the file:
$ vi /usr/lib/systemd/system/redis.service
The next line:
ExecStartPost=/bin/sh -c "echo $MAINPID > /var/run/redis/redis.pid"
And then restart the service:
$ sudo systemctl daemon-reload
$ sudo systemctl restart redis.service
Reference:
CentOs 7: Systemd & PID File
i had a similar problem on Debian Buster, systemd complains about the missing PID file, even though the file exists and redis is running.
on my system the solution using "echo $MAINPID > /run/redis/redis.pid" works by accident, although/because the real PID file is set to /run/redis/redis-server.pid (spot the different filenames!) and on my system the content of /run/redis/redis.pid (the one of the echo) was empty.
in a discussion on systemd-devel#lists.freedesktop.org someone writes:
... systemd will add the MAINPID environment variable any time it
knows what the main PID is. It learns this by reading the PID file ...
So by the time ExecStartPost runs, the main PID may or may not be
known.
having an empty MAINPID environment variable can be even harmful: if you notice the different PID filenames in the suggested solution, and correct it, you may end up in a situation where the PID file written by redis gets overwritten by an empty file. this happened to me, the result was that systemctl start redis.service never finished.
i also noticed that another server with 100% same OS and configuration, but different hardware did not have this problem.
my conclusion is that it just hits some sort of race condition, systemd seems to look for a PID file just a little too early. on my system, whatever command i used as ExecStartPost, it will add enough delay to make the error disappear.
therefore a solution is to use "sleep 1" (sleep 0.1 works too, but 1 second may be on the safe side):
ExecStartPost=/bin/sleep 1
/etc/systemd/system/redis.service now looks like:
[Service]
Type=forking
ExecStart=/usr/bin/redis-server /etc/redis/redis.conf
ExecStartPost=/bin/sleep 1
ExecStop=/bin/kill -s TERM $MAINPID
PIDFile=/run/redis/redis-server.pid
...
an alternative solution is to use "supervised systemd":
/etc/redis/redis.conf:
# If you run Redis from upstart or systemd, Redis can interact with your
# supervision tree. Options:
# supervised no - no supervision interaction
# supervised upstart - signal upstart by putting Redis into SIGSTOP mode
# supervised systemd - signal systemd by writing READY=1 to $NOTIFY_SOCKET
# supervised auto - detect upstart or systemd method based on
# UPSTART_JOB or NOTIFY_SOCKET environment variables
# Note: these supervision methods only signal "process is ready."
# They do not enable continuous liveness pings back to your supervisor.
supervised systemd
override the redis-server.service file using:
systemctl edit redis-server.service
and enter the following:
[Service]
Type=notify
reload the service and the error should be gone:
sudo systemctl restart redis.service
sudo systemctl status redis.service
Here from 2018
Before start, I am on Ubuntu 18.04.I wrote this if anyone comes here
by searching same error.
In my case error is the same but problem is so different. No solutions that proposed here worked.
So I checked logs if they are exist and looked for is there anything useful. Found them on;
cat /var/log/redis/redis-server.log
Searched logs and found that problem is that another service is listening same port.
2963:C 21 Sep 11:07:33.007 # oO0OoO0OoO0Oo Redis is starting oO0OoO0OoO0Oo
2963:C 21 Sep 11:07:33.008 # Redis version=4.0.9, bits=64, commit=00000000, modified=0, pid=2963, just started
2963:C 21 Sep 11:07:33.008 # Configuration loaded
2974:M 21 Sep 11:07:33.009 # Creating Server TCP listening socket 127.0.0.1:6379: bind: Address already in use
I checked who is listening.
netstat anp | grep 6379
Found it.
tcp6 0 0 :::6379 :::* LISTEN 3036/docker-proxy
It was docker image of redis that installed by another tool
root#yavuz:~# docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
a6a94d401700 redis:3.2 "docker-entrypoint.s…" 20 hours ago Up 3 hours 0.0.0.0:6379->6379/tcp incubatorsuperset_redis_1
So I stopped docker image
root#yavuz:~# docker stop incubatorsuperset_redis_1
And redis-server started without problem.
root#yavuz:~# systemctl start redis-server
root#yavuz:~# systemctl status redis-server
● redis-server.service - Advanced key-value store
Active: active (running) since Fri 2018-09-21 11:10:34 +03; 1min 49s ago
Process: 3671 ExecStart=/usr/bin/redis-server /etc/redis/redis.conf (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
For CentOS:
In my case name of Redis server is redis.service, start it edit
systemctl edit redis.service
Add this:
[Service]
ExecStartPost=/bin/sh -c "echo $MAINPID > /var/run/redis/redis.pid"
PIDFile=/var/run/redis/redis.pid
Im my case it create file: /etc/systemd/system/redis.service.d/override.conf
After restart service:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart redis
And the pid file is:
cat /var/run/redis/redis.pid
=> 19755
sudo nano /etc/redis/redis.conf
Inside the file, find the supervised directive. This directive allows you to declare an init system to manage Redis as a service, providing you with more control over its operation. The supervised directive is set to no by default. Since you are running Ubuntu, which uses the systemd init system, change this to systemd.
My default, Redis does not run as a daemon, and that is why it does not create a pid file. If you look at /etc/redis/redis.conf, it says so explicitly under General.
#By default Redis does not run as a daemon. Use 'yes' if you need it...
daemonize no
So all you need to do is to change it to daemonize yes
For people struggling with getting it to work on Ubuntu 18.04 you need to edit /etc/redis/redis.conf and update the pidfile declaration to following:
pidfile "/var/run/redis/redis-server.pid"
Ubuntu 18. /var/run/redis had the wrong permissions:
drwxr-sr-x 2 redis redis 60 Apr 27 12:22 redis
Changed to 755 (drwxrwxr-x) and the pid file now appears.
I am trying to setup OpenStack on Ubuntu 12.04 using devstack. Now, the error I am getting is:
Setting up rabbitmq-server (2.7.1-0ubuntu4) ...
Starting rabbitmq-server: FAILED - check /var/log/rabbitmq/startup_{log, _err}
rabbitmq-server.
invoke-rc.d: initscript rabbitmq-server, action "start" failed.
dpkg: error processing rabbitmq-server (--configure):
subprocess installed post-installation script returned error exit status 1
No apport report written because MaxReports is reached already
Errors were encountered while processing:
rabbitmq-server
E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1)
++ err_trap
++ local r=100
++ set +o xtrace
stack.sh failed
Any idea why am I getting this error?
I had this issue twice, when either hostname or ip address in the hosts file didn't match.
Therefore, check that you provide the correct ip address and hostname in the /etc/hosts file
Run sudo cat /etc/hostname to see your hostname
Output:
yoursite
Run sudo nano /etc/hosts
File contains:
127.0.0.1 yoursite
As you see from cat /etc/hostname, hostname is the same as in the /etc/hosts:
Run sudo rabbitmq-server start to start the rabbitmq-server
Try deleting the folder /var/lib/rabbitmq and re-running ./stack.sh
If that doesn't work either, run the following after stach.sh fails:
chown -R rabbitmq:rabbitmq /var/lib/rabbitmq
chown -R rabbitmq:rabbitmq /var/log/rabbitmq
service rabbitmq-server restart
and check the status of rabbitmq using "rabbitmqctl status"
Similar thing happen to me. Rabbit depends on being able to resolve a hostname, run this:
echo "127.0.0.1 $(hostname -s)" | sudo tee -a /etc/hosts
This way works for me.
First go to
sudo vim /etc/hosts
and set
127.0.0.1 <hostname>
then open firewall
sudo rabbitmq-plugins enable rabbitmq_management
sudo service rabbitmq-server restart
For a clean environment, this will not happen. You must run devstack for several times, and one of them failed but you didn't get it cleaned.
run command pf -ef | grep rabbitmq, kill all rabbitmq processes. then it would be fine to run ./stack.sh
it is highly recommended to run ./unstack.sh && ./clean.sh before ./stack.sh
Just to be sure, take a look to your local network
ip add
If there's no lo network, then you should enable it:
ifconfig lo up
Then restart the server again and let's see if it works again now
systemctl start rabbitmq-server
I had the same problem though my /etc/hosts and DNS were OK. I suspect that SystemV init script was started too early when the network was not ready yet. I rewrote the startup script to systemd on CentOS 7.8 and it seems to work well now.
[Unit]
Description=RabbitMQ
Wants=network-online.target
After=network-online.target
[Service]
Type=simple
RuntimeDirectory=rabbitmq
PrivateTmp=true
Restart=on-failure
RestartSec=10
WorkingDirectory=/opt/data/rabbitmq/
User=rabbitmq
Group=rabbitmq
ExecStart=/opt/app/rabbitmq/default/sbin/rabbitmq-server
ExecStop=/opt/app/rabbitmq/default/sbin/rabbitmqctl stop
ExecStop=/bin/sh -c "while ps -p $MAINPID >/dev/null 2>&1; do sleep 1; done"
StandardOutput=journal
StandardError=inherit
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
I'm trying to run a simple Docker image with Apache and a PHP program. It works fine if I run
docker run -t -i -p 80:80 my/httpd /bin/bash
then manually start Apache
service httpd start
however I cant get httpd to start automatically when running
docker run -d -p 80:80 my/httpd
Apache will startup then container exists. I have tried a bunch of different CMDs in my docker file
CMD /etc/init.d/httpd start
CMD ["service" "httpd" "start"]
CMD ["/bin/bash", "/etc/init.d/httpd start"]
ENTRYPOINT /etc/init.d/httpd CMD start
CMD ./start.sh
start.sh is
#!/bin/bash
/etc/init.d/httpd start
However every-time docker instance will exist after apache starts
Am I missing something really obvious?
You need to run apache (httpd) directly - you should not use init.d script.
Two options:
you have to run apache in foreground: /usr/sbin/apache2 -DFOREGROUND ... (or /usr/sbin/httpd in CentOS)
you have to start all services (including apache configured as auto-run) by executing /sbin/init as entrypoint.
Add this line in the bottom of your Dockerfile to run Apache in the foreground on CentOS
ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/sbin/httpd", "-D", "FOREGROUND"]
Simple Dockerfile to run httpd on centOS
FROM centos:latest
RUN yum update -y
RUN yum install httpd -y
ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/sbin/httpd","-D","FOREGROUND"]
Commands for building images and running container
Build
docker build . -t chttpd:latest
Running container using new image
docker container run -d -p 8000:80 chttpd:latest
In the end of Dockerfile, insert below command to start httpd
# Start httpd
ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/sbin/httpd", "-D", "FOREGROUND"]
This works for me
ENTRYPOINT /usr/sbin/httpd -D start && /bin/bash