7

How can I get warned when my server crashes for any reason? Does HopToad or any other service does that?

Thanks

EDIT:

I am using Heroku for node.js. Which doesn't allow me to run anything else. I need something to monit my code from inside out, without needing to run any other process.

Thanks

1
  • Hey not sure if you still using this setup or have an insight on what to use - do you recommend any of the add ons like pingdom/stillalive/new relic?
    – Lion789
    May 22, 2016 at 22:24

5 Answers 5

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You can try to handle uncaughtException event within your node.js program and do your "warn me" stuff there. Or you can use service like uptime robot to monitor if your app is listening on specified port for example.

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  • @Donald: Then you should probably try to handle uncaughtException event, which will be automatically invoked when something "crashing" happens. Note that when you handle this event your node.js program will not terminate and it will continue running.
    – yojimbo87
    May 12, 2011 at 8:48
  • uptime robot works great, especially for small sites that sometimes get alot of traffic.
    – toidiu
    Oct 13, 2014 at 14:41
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Quite a few options actually!

monit, forever and supervisord are the ones that stick out of the crowd in my opinion.

Since @rob-cowie already answered about supervisor, here you get a few pointer about 'forever' and 'monit'.

Monit is an overall solution to manage services on your machine - notifying you and restarting them when they crash or take up too many resources.

I have yet to find a good reason to user supervisord instead of monit, but on supervisord mailing list I saw suggestions to use monit to monitor supervisord!

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  • not sure how robust it can be 'from the inside', I should try that. btw, Heroku support for node.js is very beta right now, I do not pretend to talk you out of it but did you consider other cloud offerings such as no.de by joyent, or check this list stackoverflow.com/questions/3648993/… but I admit most of the other players are not more advanced than heroku yet! If you manage to get this working let us (so) know!
    – Stefano
    May 12, 2011 at 10:31
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One approach is to periodically check that you can successfully access a page you are serving, see http://wasitup.com/.

Another approach would be to monitor the server process on your machine. One good way to do this is to launch node.js using Supervisord. It can restart a crashed process and email you. There are numerous examples around the intarwebs, including deployment example1

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  • @Donald: Then I'd handle uncaughtException as suggested by @yojimbo87 and set up an external http monitoring tool like wasitup
    – Rob Cowie
    May 12, 2011 at 9:28
1

I've just put together a class which listens for unhandled exceptions, and when it see's one it:

  • prints the stack trace to the console
  • logs it in it's own logfile
  • emails you the stack trace
  • restarts the server (or kills it, up to you)

It will require a little tweaking for your application as I haven't made it generic as yet, but it's only a few lines and it might be what you're looking for!

It runs from inside your app, no need to include any other files (except nodemailer.js if you want the mail notifications..)

Check it out!

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If you're still using node.js on heroku, it's also worth looking at Nodejitsu. It has great support for node and runs forever, with email notifications if your app crash loops and other things. Very handy.

Also, as far as handling uncaughtException goes I'd avoid that, from experiences it's unstable and it's also noted in the latest node.js api docs that it's unreliable and unstable. See http://nodejs.org/api/process.html#process_event_uncaughtexception

Use something like forever!

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