-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 5.4k
migrate_v4_EN_service
HOME > EN > System Service
There are many ways to startup SRS:
- Directly run srs at the trunk/objs, and need start again when system restart.
- Linux service, the init.d scirpt at
srs/trunk/etc/init.d/srs
, and user can add to linux service when linked to the /etc/init.d/srs then add as service/sbin/chkconfig --add srs
.
The SRS release binary can be downloaded from release site, we can install as system service, see: Github: release or Mirror for China: release
We donot need to add to linux service to directly start SRS:
cd srs/trunk &&
./etc/init.d/srs start
or
cd srs/trunk &&
./objs/srs -c conf/srs.conf
Install and startup SRS as linux system service:
- Build SRS: the install script will modify the INSTALL ROOT of init.d script.
- Link to init.d: link the
trunk/etc/init.d/srs
to/etc/init.d/srs
- Add to linux service: use /sbin/chkconfig for Centos.
Step1: Build and Install SRS
Intall SRS when build ok:
make && sudo make install
the install of make will install srs to the prefix dir, default to /usr/local/srs
, which is specified by configure, for instance, ./configure --prefix=`pwd`/_release
set the install dir to _release of current dir to use make install
without sudo.
Step2: Link script to init.d:
sudo ln -sf \
/usr/local/srs/etc/init.d/srs \
/etc/init.d/srs
Step3:Add as linux service:
#centos 6
sudo /sbin/chkconfig --add srs
or
#ubuntu12
sudo update-rc.d srs defaults
Use init.d script
Get the status of SRS:
/etc/init.d/srs status
Start SRS:
/etc/init.d/srs start
Stop SRS:
/etc/init.d/srs stop
Restart SRS:
/etc/init.d/srs restart
Reload SRS:
/etc/init.d/srs reload
For logrotate(SIGUSR1
):
/etc/init.d/srs rotate
For Gracefully Quit(SIGQUIT
):
/etc/init.d/srs grace
CentOS7 use systemctl to manage services, we also need to install init.d service, then add to systemctl:
./configure && make && sudo make install &&
sudo ln -sf /usr/local/srs/etc/init.d/srs /etc/init.d/srs &&
sudo cp -f /usr/local/srs/usr/lib/systemd/system/srs.service /usr/lib/systemd/system/srs.service &&
sudo systemctl daemon-reload && sudo systemctl enable srs
Remark: We MUST copy the srs.service, or we couldn't enable the service by systemctl.
Use systemctl to start SRS:
sudo systemctl start srs
Gracefully Upgrade allows upgrade with zero downtime, it can be done by:
- New SRS and old SRS should be able to listen at the same ports. They provide services in the same ports simultaneously.
- The old SRS then closes listeners, and quit util all connections closed, this is Gracefully Quit.
Note: About more informations, please see #1579.
SRS3 supports Gracefully Quit:
- Use signal
SIGQUIT
, or command/etc/init.d/srs grace
- A new config
grace_start_wait
to wait for a while then start gracefully quit, default 2.3s - A new config
grace_final_wait
allows wait for a few minutes finally, default 3.2s - A new config
force_grace_quit
to force gracefully quit, see #1579.
# For gracefully quit, wait for a while then close listeners,
# because K8S notify SRS with SIGQUIT and update Service simultaneously,
# maybe there is some new connections incoming before Service updated.
# @see https://github.com/ossrs/srs/issues/1595#issuecomment-587516567
# default: 2300
grace_start_wait 2300;
# For gracefully quit, final wait for cleanup in milliseconds.
# @see https://github.com/ossrs/srs/issues/1579#issuecomment-587414898
# default: 3200
grace_final_wait 3200;
# Whether force gracefully quit, never fast quit.
# By default, SIGTERM which means fast quit, is sent by K8S, so we need to
# force SRS to treat SIGTERM as gracefully quit for gray release or canary.
# @see https://github.com/ossrs/srs/issues/1579#issuecomment-587475077
# default: off
force_grace_quit off;
Note: There is a example for Gracefully Quit, see #1579
Winlin 2019.10
Welcome to SRS wiki!
Please select your language:
Please select your language:
Please select your language:
Please select your language:
Please select your language: