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start-stop-daemon(8)		  dpkg suite		  start-stop-daemon(8)

NAME
       start-stop-daemon - start and stop system daemon	programs

SYNOPSIS
       start-stop-daemon [option...] command

DESCRIPTION
       start-stop-daemon  is  used  to control the creation and	termination of
       system-level  processes.	  Using	  one	of   the   matching   options,
       start-stop-daemon  can  be  configured  to find existing	instances of a
       running process.

       Note:  unless  --pid  or	 --pidfile  are	 specified,  start-stop-daemon
       behaves similar to killall(1).  start-stop-daemon will scan the process
       table  looking  for  any	processes which	match the process name,	parent
       pid, uid, and/or	gid (if	specified). Any	matching process will  prevent
       --start	from  starting the daemon. All matching	processes will be sent
       the TERM	signal (or the one  specified  via  --signal  or  --retry)  if
       --stop  is  specified. For daemons which	have long-lived	children which
       need to live through a --stop, you must specify a pidfile.

COMMANDS
       -S, --start [--]	arguments
	      Check for	the existence of  a  specified	process.   If  such  a
	      process  exists,	start-stop-daemon does nothing,	and exits with
	      error status 1 (0	if --oknodo is specified).  If such a  process
	      does  not	 exist,	 it  starts  an	 instance,  using  either  the
	      executable specified by --exec or, if specified,	by  --startas.
	      Any  arguments  given  after  --	on the command line are	passed
	      unmodified to the	program	being started.

       -K, --stop
	      Checks for the existence of a  specified	process.   If  such  a
	      process  exists, start-stop-daemon sends it the signal specified
	      by --signal, and exits with error	status 0.  If such  a  process
	      does  not	 exist,	start-stop-daemon exits	with error status 1 (0
	      if  --oknodo  is	specified).  If	 --retry  is  specified,  then
	      start-stop-daemon	  will	 check	 that	the  process(es)  have
	      terminated.

       -T, --status
	      Check for	the existence of a specified process, and  returns  an
	      exit  status  code,  according  to  the  LSB Init	Script Actions
	      (since version 1.16.1).

       -H, --help
	      Show usage information and exit.

       -V, --version
	      Show the program version and exit.

OPTIONS
   Matching options
       --pid pid
	      Check for	a  process  with  the  specified  pid  (since  version
	      1.17.6).	The pid	must be	a number greater than 0.

       --ppid ppid
	      Check  for  a  process with the specified	parent pid ppid	(since
	      version 1.17.7).	The ppid must be a number greater than 0.

       -p, --pidfile pid-file
	      Check whether a process has created the file pid-file.

	      Note: using this matching	option alone  might  cause  unintended
	      processes	 to be acted on, if the	old process terminated without
	      being able to remove the pid-file.

	      Warning: using this match	option with a  world-writable  pidfile
	      or  using	 it  alone with	a daemon that writes the pidfile as an
	      unprivileged (non-root) user  will  be  refused  with  an	 error
	      (since  version  1.19.3)	as  this  is  a	security risk, because
	      either any  user	can  write  to	it,  or	 if  the  daemon  gets
	      compromised,  the	contents of the	pidfile	cannot be trusted, and
	      then a privileged	runner (such as	an  init  script  executed  as
	      root)  would  end	 up  acting  on	 any  system  process.	 Using
	      /dev/null	is exempt from these checks.

       -x, --exec executable
	      Check for	processes that are instances of	this  executable.  The
	      executable  argument  should be an absolute pathname. Note: this
	      might not	work as	intended  with	interpreted  scripts,  as  the
	      executable  will	point  to  the	interpreter. Take into account
	      processes	running	from inside a chroot will also be matched,  so
	      other match restrictions might be	needed.

       -n, --name process-name
	      Check for	processes with the name	process-name. The process-name
	      is  usually the process filename,	but it could have been changed
	      by the process itself. Note: on most systems this	information is
	      retrieved	from the process comm  name  from  the	kernel,	 which
	      tends  to	 have  a  relatively short length limit	(assuming more
	      than 15 characters is non-portable).

       -u, --user username|uid
	      Check for	processes owned	by the user specified by  username  or
	      uid.  Note:  using  this	matching  option  alone	will cause all
	      processes	matching the user to be	acted on.

   Generic options
       -g, --group group|gid
	      Change to	group or gid when starting the process.

       -s, --signal signal
	      With --stop, specifies the signal	to  send  to  processes	 being
	      stopped (default TERM).

       -R, --retry timeout|schedule
	      With  --stop,  specifies	that  start-stop-daemon	 is  to	 check
	      whether the process(es) do  finish.  It  will  check  repeatedly
	      whether  any  matching processes are running, until none are. If
	      the processes do not exit	it will	then take  further  action  as
	      determined by the	schedule.

	      If  timeout  is specified	instead	of schedule, then the schedule
	      signal/timeout/KILL/timeout is used, where signal	is the	signal
	      specified	with --signal.

	      schedule	is  a  list of at least	two items separated by slashes
	      (/); each	item may be -signal-number  or	[-]signal-name,	 which
	      means  to	send that signal, or timeout, which means to wait that
	      many seconds for processes to exit, or forever, which  means  to
	      repeat the rest of the schedule forever if necessary.

	      If  the  end  of	the  schedule  is  reached  and	forever	is not
	      specified, then start-stop-daemon	exits with error status	2.  If
	      a	schedule is specified, then any	signal specified with --signal
	      is ignored.

       -a, --startas pathname
	      With --start, start the process specified	by pathname.   If  not
	      specified, defaults to the argument given	to --exec.

       -t, --test
	      Print  actions  that  would  be taken and	set appropriate	return
	      value, but take no action.

       -o, --oknodo
	      Return exit status 0 instead of 1	if no actions are  (would  be)
	      taken.

       -q, --quiet
	      Do   not	 print	informational  messages;  only	display	 error
	      messages.

       -c, --chuid username|uid[:group|gid]
	      Change to	this username/uid before starting the process. You can
	      also specify a group by appending	a :, then the group or gid  in
	      the same way as you would	for the	chown(1) command (user:group).
	      If a user	is specified without a group, the primary GID for that
	      user  is used.  When using this option you must realize that the
	      primary and supplemental groups are set as  well,	 even  if  the
	      --group  option is not specified.	The --group option is only for
	      groups that the user isn't normally a member of (like adding per
	      process group membership for generic users like nobody).

       -r, --chroot root
	      Chdir and	chroot to root before  starting	 the  process.	Please
	      note that	the pidfile is also written after the chroot.

       -d, --chdir path
	      Chdir  to	 path  before starting the process. This is done after
	      the chroot if the	-r|--chroot option is set. When	not specified,
	      start-stop-daemon	 will  chdir  to  the  root  directory	before
	      starting the process.

       -b, --background
	      Typically	 used  with  programs  that don't detach on their own.
	      This option will force start-stop-daemon to fork before starting
	      the  process,  and  force	 it  into  the	background.   Warning:
	      start-stop-daemon	 cannot	 check	the exit status	if the process
	      fails to execute for any reason. This is a last resort,  and  is
	      only  meant  for	programs  that either make no sense forking on
	      their own, or where it's not feasible to add the code  for  them
	      to do this themselves.

       --notify-await
	      Wait for the background process to send a	readiness notification
	      before  considering  the service started (since version 1.19.3).
	      This implements parts of	the  systemd  readiness	 protocol,  as
	      specified	in the sd_notify(3) man	page.  The following variables
	      are supported:

	      READY=1
		     The  program  is  ready  to  give service,	so we can exit
		     safely.

	      EXTEND_TIMEOUT_USEC=number
		     The program requests to  extend  the  timeout  by	number
		     microseconds.  This will reset the	current	timeout	to the
		     specified value.

	      ERRNO=number
		     The  program  is  exiting with an error.  Do the same and
		     print the user-friendly string for	the errno value.

       --notify-timeouttimeout
	      Set a timeout  for  the  --notify-await  option  (since  version
	      1.19.3).	 When  the  timeout is reached,	start-stop-daemon will
	      exit with	an error code, and no readiness	notification  will  be
	      awaited.	The default is 60 seconds.

       -C, --no-close
	      Do  not  close  any file descriptor when forcing the daemon into
	      the background  (since  version  1.16.5).	  Used	for  debugging
	      purposes	to  see	 the  process  output,	or  to	redirect  file
	      descriptors to log the process output.  Only relevant when using
	      --background.

       -N, --nicelevel int
	      This alters the priority of the process before starting it.

       -P, --procsched policy:priority
	      This alters the process scheduler	policy	and  priority  of  the
	      process before starting it (since	version	1.15.0).  The priority
	      can  be  optionally  specified  by appending a : followed	by the
	      value. The default priority is 0.	The currently supported	policy
	      values are other,	fifo and rr.

       -I, --iosched class:priority
	      This alters the IO scheduler class and priority of  the  process
	      before  starting it (since version 1.15.0).  The priority	can be
	      optionally specified by appending	a : followed by	the value. The
	      default priority is 4, unless class is idle, then	priority  will
	      always  be 7. The	currently supported values for class are idle,
	      best-effort and real-time.

       -k, --umask mask
	      This sets	the umask of the process  before  starting  it	(since
	      version 1.13.22).

       -m, --make-pidfile
	      Used  when  starting  a program that does	not create its own pid
	      file. This option	will make start-stop-daemon  create  the  file
	      referenced  with --pidfile and place the pid into	it just	before
	      executing	the process. Note, the file will only be removed  when
	      stopping	the  program  if --remove-pidfile is used.  Note: This
	      feature may not work in all cases. Most notably when the program
	      being executed forks from	its main process. Because of this,  it
	      is  usually  only	 useful	 when  combined	 with the --background
	      option.

       --remove-pidfile
	      Used when	stopping a program that	does not remove	 its  own  pid
	      file   (since   version	1.17.19).    This   option  will  make
	      start-stop-daemon	remove	the  file  referenced  with  --pidfile
	      after terminating	the process.

       -v, --verbose
	      Print verbose informational messages.

EXIT STATUS
       0      The  requested  action was performed. If --oknodo	was specified,
	      it's also	possible that nothing had to be	done.  This can	happen
	      when --start was specified and a matching	 process  was  already
	      running, or when --stop was specified and	there were no matching
	      processes.

       1      If --oknodo was not specified and	nothing	was done.

       2      If  --stop  and  --retry	were  specified,  but  the  end	of the
	      schedule was reached and the processes were still	running.

       3      Any other	error.

       When using  the	--status  command,  the	 following  status  codes  are
       returned:

       0      Program is running.

       1      Program is not running and the pid file exists.

       3      Program is not running.

       4      Unable to	determine program status.

EXAMPLE
       Start  the  food	daemon,	unless one is already running (a process named
       food, running as	user food, with	pid in food.pid):

	      start-stop-daemon	--start	--oknodo --user	food --name food \
		   --pidfile /run/food.pid --startas /usr/sbin/food \
		   --chuid food	-- --daemon

       Send SIGTERM to food and	wait up	to 5 seconds for it to stop:

	      start-stop-daemon	--stop --oknodo	--user food --name food	\
		   --pidfile /run/food.pid --retry 5

       Demonstration of	a custom schedule for stopping food:

	      start-stop-daemon	--stop --oknodo	--user food --name food	\
		   --pidfile /run/food.pid --retry=TERM/30/KILL/5

1.19.8				  2022-05-24		  start-stop-daemon(8)

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