overseer

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Published: Nov 27, 2020 License: MIT Imports: 19 Imported by: 0

README

overseer

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overseer is a package for creating monitorable, gracefully restarting, self-upgrading binaries in Go (golang). The main goal of this project is to facilitate the creation of self-upgrading binaries which play nice with standard process managers, secondly it should expose a small and simple API with reasonable defaults.

overseer diagram

Commonly, graceful restarts are performed by the active process (dark blue) closing its listeners and passing these matching listening socket files (green) over to a newly started process. This restart causes any foreground process monitoring to incorrectly detect a program crash. overseer attempts to solve this by using a small process to perform this socket file exchange and proxying signals and exit code from the active process.

Features
  • Simple
  • Works with process managers (systemd, upstart, supervisor, etc)
  • Graceful, zero-down time restarts
  • Easy self-upgrading binaries
Install
go get github.com/jpillora/overseer
Quick example

This program works with process managers, supports graceful, zero-down time restarts and self-upgrades its own binary.

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"log"
	"net/http"
	"time"

	"github.com/jpillora/overseer"
	"github.com/jpillora/overseer/fetcher"
)

//create another main() to run the overseer process
//and then convert your old main() into a 'prog(state)'
func main() {
	overseer.Run(overseer.Config{
		Program: prog,
		Address: ":3000",
		Fetcher: &fetcher.HTTP{
			URL:      "http://localhost:4000/binaries/myapp",
			Interval: 1 * time.Second,
		},
	})
}

//prog(state) runs in a child process
func prog(state overseer.State) {
	log.Printf("app (%s) listening...", state.ID)
	http.Handle("/", http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
		fmt.Fprintf(w, "app (%s) says hello\n", state.ID)
	}))
	http.Serve(state.Listener, nil)
}

How it works:

  • overseer uses the main process to check for and install upgrades and a child process to run Program.
  • The main process retrieves the files of the listeners described by Address/es.
  • The child process is provided with these files which is converted into a Listener/s for the Program to consume.
  • All child process pipes are connected back to the main process.
  • All signals received on the main process are forwarded through to the child process.
  • Fetcher runs in a goroutine and checks for updates at preconfigured interval. When Fetcher returns a valid binary stream (io.Reader), the master process saves it to a temporary location, verifies it, replaces the current binary and initiates a graceful restart.
  • The fetcher.HTTP accepts a URL, it polls this URL with HEAD requests and until it detects a change. On change, we GET the URL and stream it back out to overseer. See also fetcher.S3.
  • Once a binary is received, it is run with a simple echo token to confirm it is a overseer binary.
  • Except for scheduled restarts, the active child process exiting will cause the main process to exit with the same code. So, overseer is not a process manager.

See Configuration options here and the runtime State available to your program here.

More examples

See the example/ directory and run example.sh, you should see the following output:

$ cd example/
$ sh example.sh
BUILT APP (1)
RUNNING APP
app#1 (c7940a5bfc3f0e8633d3bf775f54bb59f50b338e) listening...
app#1 (c7940a5bfc3f0e8633d3bf775f54bb59f50b338e) says hello
app#1 (c7940a5bfc3f0e8633d3bf775f54bb59f50b338e) says hello
BUILT APP (2)
app#2 (3dacb8bc673c1b4d38f8fb4fad5b017671aa8a67) listening...
app#2 (3dacb8bc673c1b4d38f8fb4fad5b017671aa8a67) says hello
app#2 (3dacb8bc673c1b4d38f8fb4fad5b017671aa8a67) says hello
app#1 (c7940a5bfc3f0e8633d3bf775f54bb59f50b338e) says hello
app#1 (c7940a5bfc3f0e8633d3bf775f54bb59f50b338e) exiting...
BUILT APP (3)
app#3 (b7614e7ff42eed8bb334ed35237743b0e4041678) listening...
app#3 (b7614e7ff42eed8bb334ed35237743b0e4041678) says hello
app#3 (b7614e7ff42eed8bb334ed35237743b0e4041678) says hello
app#2 (3dacb8bc673c1b4d38f8fb4fad5b017671aa8a67) says hello
app#2 (3dacb8bc673c1b4d38f8fb4fad5b017671aa8a67) exiting...
app#3 (b7614e7ff42eed8bb334ed35237743b0e4041678) says hello

Note: app#1 stays running until the last request is closed.

Only use graceful restarts
func main() {
	overseer.Run(overseer.Config{
		Program: prog,
		Address: ":3000",
	})
}

Send main a SIGUSR2 (Config.RestartSignal) to manually trigger a restart

Only use auto-upgrades, no restarts
func main() {
	overseer.Run(overseer.Config{
		Program: prog,
		NoRestart: true,
		Fetcher: &fetcher.HTTP{
			URL:      "http://localhost:4000/binaries/myapp",
			Interval: 1 * time.Second,
		},
	})
}

Your binary will be upgraded though it will require manual restart from the user, suitable for creating self-upgrading command-line applications.

Multi-platform binaries using a dynamic fetch URL
func main() {
	overseer.Run(overseer.Config{
		Program: prog,
		Fetcher: &fetcher.HTTP{
			URL: "http://localhost:4000/binaries/app-"+runtime.GOOS+"-"+runtime.GOARCH,
			//e.g.http://localhost:4000/binaries/app-linux-amd64
		},
	})
}
Known issues
  • The master process's overseer.Config cannot be changed via an upgrade, the master process must be restarted.
    • Therefore, Addresses can only be changed by restarting the main process.
  • Currently shells out to mv for moving files because mv handles cross-partition moves unlike os.Rename.
  • Package init() functions will run twice on start, once in the main process and once in the child process.
More documentation
Third-party Fetchers
Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

Documentation

Overview

Package overseer implements daemonizable self-upgrading binaries in Go (golang).

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var (
	SIGUSR1 = syscall.SIGUSR1
	SIGUSR2 = syscall.SIGUSR2
	SIGTERM = syscall.SIGTERM
)
View Source
var (
	//DisabledState is a placeholder state for when
	//overseer is disabled and the program function
	//is run manually.
	DisabledState = State{Enabled: false}
)

Functions

func IsSupported

func IsSupported() bool

IsSupported returns whether overseer is supported on the current OS.

func Restart

func Restart()

Restart programmatically triggers a graceful restart. If NoRestart is enabled, then this will essentially be a graceful shutdown.

func Run

func Run(c Config)

Run executes overseer, if an error is encountered, overseer fallsback to running the program directly (unless Required is set).

func RunErr

func RunErr(c Config) error

RunErr allows manual handling of any overseer errors.

func SanityCheck

func SanityCheck()

SanityCheck manually runs the check to ensure this binary is compatible with overseer. This tries to ensure that a restart is never performed against a bad binary, as it would require manual intervention to rectify. This is automatically done on overseer.Run() though it can be manually run prior whenever necessary.

Types

type Config

type Config struct {
	//Required will prevent overseer from fallback to running
	//running the program in the main process on failure.
	Required bool
	//Program's main function
	Program func(state State)
	//Program's zero-downtime socket listening address (set this or Addresses)
	Address string
	//Program's zero-downtime socket listening addresses (set this or Address)
	Addresses []string
	//RestartSignal will manually trigger a graceful restart. Defaults to SIGUSR2.
	RestartSignal os.Signal
	//TerminateTimeout controls how long overseer should
	//wait for the program to terminate itself. After this
	//timeout, overseer will issue a SIGKILL.
	TerminateTimeout time.Duration
	//MinFetchInterval defines the smallest duration between Fetch()s.
	//This helps to prevent unwieldy fetch.Interfaces from hogging
	//too many resources. Defaults to 1 second.
	MinFetchInterval time.Duration
	//PreUpgrade runs after a binary has been retrieved, user defined checks
	//can be run here and returning an error will cancel the upgrade.
	PreUpgrade func(tempBinaryPath string) error
	//Debug enables all [overseer] logs.
	Debug bool
	//NoWarn disables warning [overseer] logs.
	NoWarn bool
	//NoRestart disables all restarts, this option essentially converts
	//the RestartSignal into a "ShutdownSignal".
	NoRestart bool
	//NoRestartAfterFetch disables automatic restarts after each upgrade.
	//Though manual restarts using the RestartSignal can still be performed.
	NoRestartAfterFetch bool
	//Fetcher will be used to fetch binaries.
	Fetcher fetcher.Interface
}

Config defines overseer's run-time configuration

type OverseerListener

type OverseerListener struct {
	net.Listener
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

gracefully closing net.Listener

func (*OverseerListener) Accept

func (l *OverseerListener) Accept() (net.Conn, error)

func (*OverseerListener) Close

func (l *OverseerListener) Close() error

blocking wait for close

func (*OverseerListener) File

func (l *OverseerListener) File() *os.File

type State

type State struct {
	//whether overseer is running enabled. When enabled,
	//this program will be running in a child process and
	//overseer will perform rolling upgrades.
	Enabled bool
	//ID is a SHA-1 hash of the current running binary
	ID string
	//StartedAt records the start time of the program
	StartedAt time.Time
	//Listener is the first net.Listener in Listeners
	Listener net.Listener
	//Listeners are the set of acquired sockets by the master
	//process. These are all passed into this program in the
	//same order they are specified in Config.Addresses.
	Listeners []net.Listener
	//Program's first listening address
	Address string
	//Program's listening addresses
	Addresses []string
	//GracefulShutdown will be filled when its time to perform
	//a graceful shutdown.
	GracefulShutdown chan bool
	//Path of the binary currently being executed
	BinPath string
}

State contains the current run-time state of overseer

Directories

Path Synopsis

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