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Anyone who reads blogs Rails community has probably heard of God. No, not the deity in the sky, but an excellent monitoring application watches processes and continues to work. I saw mostly mestizos used to tame but can be used to monitor any process.

We're running to God for all our managed hosting clients to ensure that the Métis do not leave exhausted. It held a great place to date. See the resources at the end of this article our startup script and a sample of the overall configuration.

The configuration file must be independent of God himself. It's just Ruby code, not magic nothing happens there. I wrapped the core code God.watch around a few loops to enable support for tracking an unlimited number of applications. A small note init.d script: First, God starts and loads the configuration file via the "burden of the order of God." I realize that God can send the-c parameter when launching, but I think sometimes (apparently randomly) could not load the configuration.

The init.d script should work fine on any RHEL / CentOS system. Once you add the file / etc / init.d / God does not just:

 chmod + x / etc / init.d / God

 chkconfig - add god 

 chkconfig - Level 345 God in the 

 / Etc / init.d / start God 

Now you're ready to go. Misbehavior that K-9 demons are their best – you are not a rival to God.

Here are some resources relevant to this article:

  • rel = "nofollow" href = "http://god.rubyforge.org/"> God
  • Integral Impressions managed hosting services [http://integralimpressions.com/services/managed-rails-hosting]
  • / Etc / init.d / God
  • rel = "nofollow" href = "http://pastie.caboo.se/110408"> / etc / god.conf

Ben Myles is a web developer for Integral Impressions, an interactive marketing firm that specializes in Internet marketing products and services.



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