In short, you have to launch your program in a special way, and you have (at least) two options: nohup
or screen
.
Let's now discuss why and how each one works.
nohup
Java's daemon threads is not what you are looking for, they have nothing to do with the issue. You can use normal threads (or even a single-threaded java program). You just need to change the way you launch your java program.
I have many executable jars that run as "daemons" on a bunch of servers, and I made a simple launch script that prepares the environment and makes it possible to terminate the SSH connection without stopping it. The main part is how to invoke the JVM: you use nohup.
nohup java -jar myfile.jar > stdout.log &
From nohup's man,
nohup - run a command immune to hangups, with output to a non-tty
So, when you terminate your SSH connection, it will send SIGHUP to all processes it started which would terminate them as you are observing. With nohup
, however, your process is immune to it.
Also, note that I redirect the standard output to a file called stdout.log
. This is done so that you can see whatever your program writes to STDOUT (generally some logging information that would be useful for debugging).
To terminate your program, you can use jps
to list the PID
of your process (say it's 123
), then call kill 123
. Note that for this to work your program needs to correctly handle this kind of shutdown (which involves adding a shutdown hook with Runtime.getRuntime().addShutdownHook(...)
which will terminate all the threads you launched).
If, for whatever reason (a bug, or you didn't implement a graceful shutdown), the program won't terminate after issuing the kill
command (which sends the process a SIGTERM
), you can change the signal it sends to SIGKILL
with kill -9 123
, which will simply destroy the process. Mind that this can be as dangerous as a power failure (ie, suppose you are in the middle of the try
block of a try {} finally {}
-- your finally
block will not execute!).
screen
There's an alternative, which is to use SCREEN
. With it, you launch a shell that is also immune to shutdowns, and that you can share among many connections. To use it, connect to your server, and then:
screen -R
A new shell will start, in which you run your java program as normal:
java -jar myfile.jar
To make it go to the background, just press ctrl+a ctrl+d
. To bring it back to the front, just execute screen -R
again. If you wish to terminate your program, you could do so by entering the screen
session again and pressing ctrl+c
(if your java program correctly deals with this kind of shutdown).
upstart
or initd. You can write a minimal script to execute and daemonize a process on certain triggers, like startup and shutdown. And you can manually start/stop the service as well.