95

I really don't know how to get supervisor to work with environment variables.

Below is a configuration snippet.

[program:htNotificationService]
priority=2
#autostart=true
#autorestart=true
directory=/home/ubuntu/workspace/htFrontEnd/heythat/htsite
command = /usr/bin/python htNotificationService.py -service
stdout_logfile=/var/log/heythat/htNotificationService.log
redirect_stderr=true
environment=PATH=/home/ubuntu/workspace/htFrontEnd/heythat
stopsignal=QUIT

I have tried the following:

environment=PATH=/home/ubuntu/workspace/htFrontEnd/heythat
environment=PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/home/ubuntu/workspace/htFrontEnd/heythat
environment=PATH=/home/ubuntu/workspace/htFrontEnd/heythat,PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/home/ubuntu/workspace/htFrontEnd/heythat

When I start supervisor I get

htNotificationService: ERROR (abnormal termination)

I can start from the shell by setting the python path, but not from supervisor. In the logs I get an error that says that an import can't be found. Well, that would be solved if supervisor would work. I even have the path in /etc/environments?

Why will supervisor not work?

0

5 Answers 5

132

Referencing existing env vars is done with %(ENV_VARNAME)s

See: https://github.com/Supervisor/supervisor/blob/master/supervisor/skel/sample.conf

Setting multiple environment variables is done by separating them with commas

See: http://supervisord.org/subprocess.html#subprocess-environment

Try:

environment=PYTHONPATH=/opt/mypypath:%(ENV_PYTHONPATH)s,PATH=/opt/mypath:%(ENV_PATH)s
4
  • 2
    Do these environment variable names have be in the same manifest file? or it can also expand the variable names in bash?
    – Panshul
    Jan 22, 2015 at 18:03
  • 1
    I don't understand either question.. what manifest file are you referring to? Can you give an example of what you're thinking? Mar 4, 2015 at 20:27
  • 3
    so every env variables is prefixed with ENV_ ? weird Nov 15, 2017 at 6:13
  • Is there any way to provide default value for these variables?
    – Rakmo
    Apr 26, 2021 at 9:58
40

In your .conf file under the supervisord block, you can add all the environment key=value pairs as such

[supervisord]
environment=CELERY_BROKER_URL="amqp://guest:guest@127.0.0.1:5672//",FLASK_CONFIG="TESTING"

[program:celeryd]
command=celery worker -A celery --loglevel=info -P gevent -c 1000

If you dont want to hardcode the variables but want to pull it in from the os environment, step 1 on your bash

Export env var

>> sudo export CELERY_BROKER_URL="amqp://guest:guest@127.0.0.1:5672//"

Reload Bash

>> . ~/.bashrc

Check if env vars are set properly

>> env

Now modify the conf file to read - Note: prepend your env variables with ENV_

[supervisord]
environment=CELERY_BROKER_URL="%(ENV_CELERY_BROKER_URL)s",FLASK_CONFIG="%(ENV_FLASK_CONFIG)s"

[program:celeryd]
command=celery worker -A celery --loglevel=info -P gevent -c 1000
6
  • 5
    great answer. these little variations are the important ones. Apr 18, 2017 at 21:44
  • Bear in mind that relying on environment variables only works if they were set when the supervisord process was started.
    – villasv
    Aug 15, 2017 at 2:18
  • 8
    it can't work error: <class 'xmlrpclib.Fault'>, <Fault 92: "CANT_REREAD: Format string 'PROJECT_ENV=%(ENV_PROJECT_ENV)s' for 'supervisord.environment' contains names ('ENV_PROJECT_ENV') which cannot be expanded. Available names: ENV_LANG, ENV_PATH, here">: file: /usr/lib/python2.7/xmlrpclib.py line: 800
    – wyx
    Jan 12, 2018 at 10:19
  • Same here, any solutions to the expanded issue above? Jan 21, 2019 at 22:17
  • @jetpackdata.com My configuration file [supervisord] environment=CELERY_BROKER_URL="amqp://guest:guest@127.0.0.1:5672//",FLASK_CONFIG="TESTING" [program:test_process] command=python -u test.py directory=/home/dinesh stdout_logfile=/home/dinesh/test_process_output.txt redirect_stderr=true and python file is import time count = 0 while True: count = count + 1 print(str(count) + ". This prints once every 2secs.%(ENV_FLASK_CONFIG)s") time.sleep(2) . variable is not being replaced in my file. please help
    – dinu0101
    Jun 24, 2019 at 17:50
27

this works for me. note the tabs before each line:

environment=
    CLOUD_INSTANCE_NAME=media-server-xx-xx-xx-xx,
    CLOUD_APPLICATION=media-server,
    CLOUD_APP_COMPONENT=none,
    CLOUD_ZONE=a,
    CLOUD_REGION=b,
    CLOUD_PRIVATE_IP=none,
    CLOUD_PUBLIC_IP=xx.xx.xx.xx,
    CLOUD_PUBLIC_IPV6=xx.xx.xx.xx.xx.xx,
    CLOUD_PROVIDER=c
1
  • Can the same environment names be used for another app without colliding the values?
    – user9591909
    Feb 23, 2020 at 17:37
25

I know this is old but I just struggled with this for hours and wanted to maybe help out the next guy.

Don't forget to reload your config files after making updates

supervisorctl reread
supervisorctl update
0
7

If you install supervisor from a package installer, check which Supervisor version you are using. As of August 2016 you will get 3.0b2. If this is the case you will need a newer version of supervisor. You can get it by installing supervisor manually or by using Python's pip. Make sure all the dependencies are met, along with the upstart setup so that supervisord works as a service and starts on system boot.

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