Files @ a4a4bcc09ac5
Branch filter:

Location: kallithea/init.d/kallithea-daemon-arch

Mads Kiilerich
middleware: remove access fallback to reuse previous access - drop _git_stored_op

Before, the previous action was kept in the global controller instance. That
was conceptually wrong. The previous request might be entirely unrelated,
coming from another user.

It was mainly used for 'info/refs' commands ... but even more, that will be the
first command that is sent, giving nothing relevant to reuse.

Fortunately, with handling of 'info/refs', we no longer seem to need it.

The fallback for unknown commands with unknown 'action' is now to return a HTTP
failure, like we do for Mercurial.
#!/bin/bash
###########################################
#### THIS IS AN ARCH LINUX RC.D SCRIPT ####
###########################################

. /etc/rc.conf
. /etc/rc.d/functions

DAEMON=kallithea
APP_HOMEDIR="/srv"
APP_PATH="$APP_HOMEDIR/$DAEMON"
CONF_NAME="production.ini"
LOG_FILE="/var/log/$DAEMON.log"
PID_FILE="/run/daemons/$DAEMON"
APPL=/usr/bin/gearbox
RUN_AS="*****"

ARGS="serve --daemon \
--user=$RUN_AS \
--group=$RUN_AS \
--pid-file=$PID_FILE \
--log-file=$LOG_FILE \
-c $APP_PATH/$CONF_NAME"

[ -r /etc/conf.d/$DAEMON ] && . /etc/conf.d/$DAEMON

if [[ -r $PID_FILE ]]; then
    read -r PID < "$PID_FILE"
    if [[ $PID && ! -d /proc/$PID ]]; then
        unset PID
        rm_daemon $DAEMON
    fi
fi

case "$1" in
start)
    stat_busy "Starting $DAEMON"
    export HOME=$APP_PATH
    [ -z "$PID" ] && $APPL $ARGS &>/dev/null
    if [ $? = 0 ]; then
        add_daemon $DAEMON
        stat_done
    else
        stat_fail
        exit 1
    fi
    ;;
stop)
    stat_busy "Stopping $DAEMON"
    [ -n "$PID" ] && kill $PID &>/dev/null
    if [ $? = 0 ]; then
        rm_daemon $DAEMON
        stat_done
    else
        stat_fail
        exit 1
    fi
    ;;
restart)
    $0 stop
    sleep 1
    $0 start
    ;;
status)
    stat_busy "Checking $name status";
    ck_status $name
    ;;
*)
    echo "usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|status}"
esac