661

Since this post has gotten a lot of attention over the years, I've listed the top solutions per platform at the bottom of this post.


Original post:

I want my node.js server to run in the background, i.e.: when I close my terminal I want my server to keep running. I've googled this and came up with this tutorial, however it doesn't work as intended. So instead of using that daemon script, I thought I just used the output redirection (the 2>&1 >> file part), but this too does not exit - I get a blank line in my terminal, like it's waiting for output/errors.

I've also tried to put the process in the background, but as soon as I close my terminal the process is killed as well.

So how can I leave it running when I shut down my local computer?


Top solutions:

5
  • 3
    I think he meant to shut down his local system Jun 19, 2013 at 13:16
  • 67
    he meant closing a ssh session terminates the task
    – thedjaney
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:38
  • 6
    github.com/Unitech/pm2 is a highly maintained and very stable process manager, give it a try !
    – Unitech
    Aug 3, 2014 at 10:50
  • 2
    you can use screen (aperiodic.net/screen/quick_reference)
    – karantan
    Feb 16, 2015 at 10:17
  • You can use nohup, search in google how to use this.
    – Vijay
    Mar 12, 2021 at 5:24

31 Answers 31

611

Copying my own answer from How do I run a Node.js application as its own process?

2015 answer: nearly every Linux distro comes with systemd, which means forever, monit, PM2, etc are no longer necessary - your OS already handles these tasks.

Make a myapp.service file (replacing 'myapp' with your app's name, obviously):

[Unit]
Description=My app

[Service]
ExecStart=/var/www/myapp/app.js
Restart=always
User=nobody
# Note Debian/Ubuntu uses 'nogroup', RHEL/Fedora uses 'nobody'
Group=nogroup
Environment=PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin
Environment=NODE_ENV=production
WorkingDirectory=/var/www/myapp

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Note if you're new to Unix: /var/www/myapp/app.js should have #!/usr/bin/env node on the very first line and have the executable mode turned on chmod +x app.js.

Copy your service file into the /etc/systemd/system.

Start it with systemctl start myapp.

Enable it to run on boot with systemctl enable myapp.

See logs with journalctl -u myapp

This is taken from How we deploy node apps on Linux, 2018 edition, which also includes commands to generate an AWS/DigitalOcean/Azure CloudConfig to build Linux/node servers (including the .service file).

30
  • 8
    Upstart , when available is also a good solution. either way, you should not rely on a nodejs process to keep your nodejs daemon running. This is one task for the OS solely. killall nodejs and forever is gone....
    – 131
    Jul 26, 2015 at 9:26
  • 26
    Note that it's also possible to run systemd services as a user. See for example this tutorial. You can put your service file in ~/.config/systemd/user, start it with systemctl --user start myapp, enable it with systemctl --user enable myapp.
    – cdauth
    Dec 29, 2015 at 7:26
  • 8
    Thanks for this answer. This is what i want pure and clear
    – bmavus
    Jan 10, 2016 at 19:35
  • 8
    I've accepted this answer instead of the "forever" answer, since I also think this is the best way to do it. There are similar answers for Mac & Windows, but I'm guessing the majority is looking for a Linux solution. Jan 16, 2016 at 11:56
  • 12
    in EC2 AMI path /etc/systemd/system does not exist. Can you point what is the correct path in AWS EC2 Linux AMI? Jan 18, 2016 at 19:02
256

UPDATE - As mentioned in one of the answers below, PM2 has some really nice functionality missing from forever. Consider using it.

Original Answer

Use nohup:

nohup node server.js &

EDIT I wanted to add that the accepted answer is really the way to go. I'm using forever on instances that need to stay up. I like to do npm install -g forever so it's in the node path and then just do forever start server.js

11
  • 155
    cool part to know: nohup stands for no hangup which comes from the old days, where you wanted you keep a process alive when you "hangup" your modem.
    – jAndy
    Oct 28, 2010 at 19:48
  • 1
    nowadays it's rather the name of signal 1 that processes receive to warn that the user closed the shell (or lost modem connection, of course :P)
    – lapo
    Dec 16, 2011 at 9:44
  • 7
    It's not the best solution because if the app encounters an uncaught error the node process will exit and not restart. Still, it's a reasonable option for development.
    – Andy E
    May 31, 2012 at 18:38
  • 2
    How would I add environmental variables to that? eg: PORT=80 node server.js
    – Pardoner
    Oct 2, 2012 at 18:45
  • 1
    Check out this answer from SO - stackoverflow.com/questions/8825460/…
    – NG.
    Oct 3, 2012 at 16:05
249

You can use Forever, A simple CLI tool for ensuring that a given node script runs continuously (i.e. forever): https://www.npmjs.org/package/forever

12
  • 6
    With latest node I was unable to get it to stop an app via the script name (error) - also - generally misbehaving (was on OS-X) - all built from source, oddly. Left things in a bad state, didn't fill me with confidence. Apr 12, 2011 at 12:32
  • 4
    While nohup does the trick, forever is a better solution as it daemonizes the process. Great tool! Jun 9, 2011 at 9:57
  • 5
    Just by the way, a simpler tutorial is available here: Keep a node.js server up with Forever
    – kehers
    Sep 29, 2012 at 2:20
  • 2
    I did use Forever for a while, at the beginning everything seems ok but then disaster happened. Forever could not manage the processes anymore and let them run wild. Still struggling to find a better solution. I will try to use nohup
    – L N
    Jan 21, 2013 at 12:25
  • 5
    Geoffrey- no, you'll need to do forever start /path/to/yourApp.js in your server startup script. Mar 3, 2013 at 17:14
78

This might not be the accepted way, but I do it with screen, especially while in development because I can bring it back up and fool with it if necessary.

screen
node myserver.js
>>CTRL-A then hit D

The screen will detach and survive you logging off. Then you can get it back back doing screen -r. Hit up the screen manual for more details. You can name the screens and whatnot if you like.

6
  • 3
    Also, tmux is nice. Works like screen (CTRL-B is default instead of CTRL-A, but is configurable). Tmux has panels (split screens). Mar 21, 2012 at 18:17
  • i'm using this since a couple of weeks for a meteor app. `$screen -dr' for detaching and reattaching might be required occasionally. Apr 9, 2015 at 7:42
  • For me the easiest way to have the job done. But I agree, not the best solution Feb 12, 2018 at 15:11
  • This solution does not persist after a reboot of system
    – wnasich
    May 8, 2020 at 13:12
  • In as much as it is not the best solution, for development purposes, it is the best, as, it doesn't require additional dependencies/installations. So +1. (Forgotten about screens entirely) :)
    – Dark Star1
    Mar 29, 2022 at 11:39
73

2016 Update: The node-windows/mac/linux series uses a common API across all operating systems, so it is absolutely a relevant solution. However; node-linux generates systemv init files. As systemd continues to grow in popularity, it is realistically a better option on Linux. PR's welcome if anyone wants to add systemd support to node-linux :-)

Original Thread:

This is a pretty old thread now, but node-windows provides another way to create background services on Windows. It is loosely based on the nssm concept of using an exe wrapper around your node script. However; it uses winsw.exe instead and provides a configurable node wrapper for more granular control over how the process starts/stops on failures. These processes are available like any other service:

enter image description here

The module also bakes in some event logging:

enter image description here

Daemonizing your script is accomplished through code. For example:

var Service = require('node-windows').Service;

// Create a new service object
var svc = new Service({
  name:'Hello World',
  description: 'The nodejs.org example web server.',
  script: 'C:\\path\\to\\my\\node\\script.js'
});

// Listen for the "install" event, which indicates the
// process is available as a service.
svc.on('install',function(){
  svc.start();
});

// Listen for the "start" event and let us know when the
// process has actually started working.
svc.on('start',function(){
  console.log(svc.name+' started!\nVisit http://127.0.0.1:3000 to see it in action.');
});

// Install the script as a service.
svc.install();

The module supports things like capping restarts (so bad scripts don't hose your server) and growing time intervals between restarts.

Since node-windows services run like any other, it is possible to manage/monitor the service with whatever software you already use.

Finally, there are no make dependencies. In other words, a straightforward npm install -g node-windows will work. You don't need Visual Studio, .NET, or node-gyp magic to install this. Also, it's MIT and BSD licensed.

In full disclosure, I'm the author of this module. It was designed to relieve the exact pain the OP experienced, but with tighter integration into the functionality the Operating System already provides. I hope future viewers with this same question find it useful.

6
  • 11
    I've now ported this to node-mac, providing the same functionality on OSX.
    – Corey
    May 20, 2013 at 20:47
  • 1
    I have come to the point to schedule a couple of Node programs and stand before a decision to choose node-windows, Forever or Kue. I lean towards node-windows but would like to understand why not not to use Forever or Kue when I want to schedule and monitor a dozen of node programs. Some running forever. Need monitoring too. May 22, 2014 at 7:15
  • 6
    Node-windows uses the native OS for managing background services, and the native event log for logging. Forever has it's own custom monitoring & logging. I wrote an article on this at medium.com/p/2a602ea657a2 It sounds like you need to schedule your scripts, not run them all the time as background services. Projects like Kue and Agenda are designed for this. Node-windows & Forever serve a different purpose.
    – Corey
    May 23, 2014 at 0:23
  • 1
    @Corey, how do i run the example included in node-mac ?, from terminal, i tried node install.js, but it does not seem to pickup helloworld.js
    – Edwin O.
    Aug 12, 2016 at 9:40
  • 1
    @Edwin - Might be best to open a new question with more detail about the problem, including the code you are using.
    – Corey
    Aug 12, 2016 at 16:32
59

If you simply want to run the script uninterrupted until it completes you can use nohup as already mentioned in the answers here. However, none of the answers provide a full command that also logs stdin and stdout.

nohup node index.js >> app.log 2>&1 &
  • The >> means append to app.log.
  • 2>&1 makes sure that errors are also send to stdout and added to the app.log.
  • The ending & makes sure your current terminal is disconnected from command so you can continue working.

If you want to run a node server (or something that should start back up when the server restarts) you should use systemd / systemctl.

0
32

UPDATE: i updated to include the latest from pm2:

for many use cases, using a systemd service is the simplest and most appropriate way to manage a node process. for those that are running numerous node processes or independently-running node microservices in a single environment, pm2 is a more full featured tool.

https://github.com/unitech/pm2

http://pm2.io

  • it has a really useful monitoring feature -> pretty 'gui' for command line monitoring of multiple processes with pm2 monit or process list with pm2 list
  • organized Log management -> pm2 logs
  • other stuff:
    • Behavior configuration
    • Source map support
    • PaaS Compatible
    • Watch & Reload
    • Module System
    • Max memory reload
    • Cluster Mode
    • Hot reload
    • Development workflow
    • Startup Scripts
    • Auto completion
    • Deployment workflow
    • Keymetrics monitoring
    • API
29

Try to run this command if you are using nohup -

nohup npm start 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null&

You can also use forever to start server

forever start -c "npm start" ./ 

PM2 also supports npm start

pm2 start npm -- start
2
  • 4
    thnx, this worked perfectly. pm2 start npm -- start
    – ramya
    Feb 4, 2019 at 16:00
  • Thanks, I'm using NestJS so I tried to run: [forever start -c "npm run start" ./] and it worked really well! Sep 18, 2021 at 17:51
22

If you are running OSX, then the easiest way to produce a true system process is to use launchd to launch it.

Build a plist like this, and put it into the /Library/LaunchDaemons with the name top-level-domain.your-domain.application.plist (you need to be root when placing it):

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
    <key>Label</key>
    <string>top-level-domain.your-domain.application</string>

    <key>WorkingDirectory</key>
    <string>/your/preferred/workingdirectory</string>

    <key>ProgramArguments</key>
    <array>
        <string>/usr/local/bin/node</string>
        <string>your-script-file</string>
    </array>

    <key>RunAtLoad</key>
    <true/>

    <key>KeepAlive</key>
    <true/>

</dict>
</plist>

When done, issue this (as root):

launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/top-level-domain.your-domain.application.plist
launchctl start top-level-domain.your-domain.application

and you are running.

And you will still be running after a restart.

For other options in the plist look at the man page here: https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/Darwin/Reference/Manpages/man5/launchd.plist.5.html

1
  • What user will this run the service as? Is there a way to set the user?
    – rjmunro
    Apr 29, 2016 at 16:30
14

I am simply using the daemon npm module:

var daemon = require('daemon');

daemon.daemonize({
    stdout: './log.log'
  , stderr: './log.error.log'
  }
, './node.pid'
, function (err, pid) {
  if (err) {
    console.log('Error starting daemon: \n', err);
    return process.exit(-1);
  }
  console.log('Daemonized successfully with pid: ' + pid);

  // Your Application Code goes here
});

Lately I'm also using mon(1) from TJ Holowaychuk to start and manage simple node apps.

12

I use Supervisor for development. It just works. When ever you make changes to a .js file Supervisor automatically restarts your app with those changes loaded.

Here's a link to its Github page

Install :

sudo npm install supervisor -g

You can easily make it watch other extensions with -e. Another command I use often is -i to ignore certain folders.

You can use nohup and supervisor to make your node app run in the background even after you log out.

sudo nohup supervisor myapp.js &

2
  • 1
    I think in practice supervisor is a better option than most of the daemon modules, particularly used in conjunction with a webhook to checkout updates. Feb 7, 2014 at 19:10
  • I second this one. If you change PHP files, would you restart Apache or Nginx server? Definitely not. Then why bothering to restart the whole Node.js server even just change one line of code? Though this may not be the best solution, at lease with Supervisor you do not need to worry about the restart process (actually the restart still happen).
    – Zhang Buzz
    May 14, 2017 at 0:39
7

Node.js as a background service in WINDOWS XP

Installation:

  1. Install WGET http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/wget.htm via installer executable
  2. Install GIT http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/downloads/list via installer executable
  3. Install NSSM http://nssm.cc/download/?page=download via copying nnsm.exe into %windir%/system32 folder
  4. Create c:\node\helloworld.js

    // http://howtonode.org/hello-node
    var http = require('http');
    var server = http.createServer(function (request, response) {
        response.writeHead(200, {"Content-Type": "text/plain"});
        response.end("Hello World\n");
    });
    server.listen(8000);
    console.log("Server running at http://127.0.0.1:8000/");
    
  5. Open command console and type the following (setx only if Resource Kit is installed)

    C:\node> set path=%PATH%;%CD%
    C:\node> setx path "%PATH%"
    C:\node> set NODE_PATH="C:\Program Files\nodejs\node_modules"
    C:\node> git config --system http.sslcainfo /bin/curl-ca-bundle.crt    
    C:\node> git clone --recursive git://github.com/isaacs/npm.git    
    C:\node> cd npm    
    C:\node\npm> node cli.js install npm -gf   
    C:\node> cd ..    
    C:\node> nssm.exe install node-helloworld "C:\Program Files\nodejs\node.exe" c:\node\helloworld.js    
    C:\node> net start node-helloworld
    
  6. A nifty batch goodie is to create c:\node\ServiceMe.cmd

    @echo off
    nssm.exe install node-%~n1 "C:\Program Files\nodejs\node.exe" %~s1
    net start node-%~n1
    pause
    

Service Management:

  • The services themselves are now accessible via Start-> Run-> services.msc or via Start->Run-> MSCONFIG-> Services (and check 'Hide All Microsoft Services').
  • The script will prefix every node made via the batch script with 'node-'.
  • Likewise they can be found in the registry: "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\node-xxxx"
7

The accepted answer is probably the best production answer, but for a quick hack doing dev work, I found this:

nodejs scriptname.js & didn't work, because nodejs seemed to gobble up the &, and so the thing didn't let me keep using the terminal without scriptname.js dying.

But I put nodejs scriptname.js in a .sh file, and nohup sh startscriptname.sh & worked.

Definitely not a production thing, but it solves the "I need to keep using my terminal and don't want to start 5 different terminals" problem.

6

June 2017 Update:
Solution for Linux: (Red hat). Previous comments doesn't work for me. This works for me on Amazon Web Service - Red Hat 7. Hope this works for somebody out there.

A. Create the service file 
sudo vi /etc/systemd/system/myapp.service
[Unit]
Description=Your app
After=network.target

[Service]
ExecStart=/home/ec2-user/meantodos/start.sh
WorkingDirectory=/home/ec2-user/meantodos/

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

B. Create a shell file
/home/ec2-root/meantodos/start.sh
#!/bin/sh -
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to 8080
npm start

then:
chmod +rx /home/ec2-root/meantodos/start.sh
(to make this file executable)

C. Execute the Following

sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl start myapp
sudo systemctl status myapp

(If there are no errors, execute below.  Autorun after server restarted.)
chkconfig myapp -add
1
  • very Interesting, I am just curious about iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to 8080 what it does. Can you give me more details please. I am not sure but I think it redirects traffic from 80 to 8080 which node server listens to, right? May 21, 2019 at 7:42
5

If you are running nodejs in linux server, I think this is the best way.

Create a service script and copy to /etc/init/nodejs.conf

start service: sudo service nodejs start

stop service: sudo service nodejs stop

Sevice script

description "DManager node.js server - Last Update: 2012-08-06"
author      "Pedro Muniz - [email protected]"

env USER="nodejs" #you have to create this user 
env APPNAME="nodejs" #you can change the service name
env WORKDIR="/home/<project-home-dir>" #set your project home folder here
env COMMAND="/usr/bin/node <server name>" #app.js ?

# used to be: start on startup
# until we found some mounts weren't ready yet while booting:
start on started mountall
stop on shutdown

# Automatically Respawn:
respawn
respawn limit 99 5

pre-start script
    sudo -u $USER echo "[`date -u +%Y-%m-%dT%T.%3NZ`] (sys) Starting" >> /var/log/$APPNAME.log
end script

script
    # Not sure why $HOME is needed, but we found that it is:
    export HOME="<project-home-dir>"  #set your project home folder here
    export NODE_PATH="<project node_path>"

    #log file, grant permission to nodejs user
    exec start-stop-daemon --start --make-pidfile --pidfile /var/run/$APPNAME.pid --chuid $USER --chdir $WORKDIR --exec $COMMAND >> /var/log/$APPNAME.log 2>&1
end script

post-start script
   # Optionally put a script here that will notifiy you node has (re)started
   # /root/bin/hoptoad.sh "node.js has started!"
end script

pre-stop script
    sudo -u $USER echo "[`date -u +%Y-%m-%dT%T.%3NZ`] (sys) Stopping" >> /var/log/$APPNAME.log
end script
3

use nssm the best solution for windows, just download nssm, open cmd to nssm directory and type

nssm install <service name> <node path> <app.js path> 

eg: nssm install myservice "C:\Program Files\nodejs" "C:\myapp\app.js" 

this will install a new windows service which will be listed at services.msc from there you can start or stop the service, this service will auto start and you can configure to restart if it fails.

3

Use pm2 module. pm2 nodejs module

3

Since I'm missing this option in the list of provided answers I'd like to add an eligible option as of 2020: docker or any equivalent container platform. In addition to ensuring your application is working in a stable environment there are additional security benefits as well as improved portability.

There is docker support for Windows, macOS and most/major Linux distributions. Installing docker on a supported platform is rather straight-forward and well-documented. Setting up a Node.js application is as simple as putting it in a container and running that container while making sure its being restarted after shutdown.

Create Container Image

Assuming your application is available in /home/me/my-app on that server, create a text file Dockerfile in folder /home/me with content similar to this one:

FROM node:lts-alpine
COPY /my-app/ /app/
RUN cd /app && npm ci
CMD ["/app/server.js"]

It is creating an image for running LTS version of Node.js under Alpine Linux, copying the application's files into the image and runs npm ci to make sure dependencies are matching that runtime context.

Create another file .dockerignore in same folder with content

**/node_modules

This will prevent existing dependencies of your host system from being injected into container as they might not work there. The presented RUN command in Dockerfile is going to fix that.

Create the image using command like this:

docker build -t myapp-as-a-service /home/me

The -t option is selecting the "name" of built container image. This is used on running containers below.

Note: Last parameter is selecting folder containing that Dockerfile instead of the Dockerfile itself. You may pick a different one using option -f.

Start Container

Use this command for starting the container:

docker run -d --restart always -p 80:3000 myapp-as-a-service

This command is assuming your app is listening on port 3000 and you want it to be exposed on port 80 of your host.

This is a very limited example for sure, but it's a good starting point.

2

To round out the various options suggested, here is one more: the daemon command in GNU/Linux, which you can read about here: http://libslack.org/daemon/manpages/daemon.1.html. (apologies if this is already mentioned in one of the comments above).

2

I am bit late. Simple solution is to execute below two commands in terminal as shown below.

nohup node ./server.js &
disown -h %1 

Then close your ssh session and node program continues to run. Tested on Ubuntu 18.

1

Check out fugue! Apart from launching many workers, you can demonize your node process too!

http://github.com/pgte/fugue

1

PM2 is a production process manager for Node.js applications with a built-in load balancer. It allows you to keep applications alive forever, to reload them without downtime and to facilitate common system admin tasks. https://github.com/Unitech/pm2

1
  • serious memory consumption issues ! go for phusion+ nginx Mar 14, 2016 at 12:34
1

I am surprised that nobody has mentioned Guvnor

I have tried forever, pm2, etc. But, when it comes to solid control and web based performance metrics, I have found Guvnor to be by far the best. Plus, it is also fully opensource.

enter image description here

Edit : However, I am not sure if it works on windows. I've only used it on linux.

1
  • 4
    Seems stale as of 2017. Build failing. No code pushes in the last year. Questionable.
    – 4Z4T4R
    Apr 14, 2017 at 7:52
1

has anyone noticed a trivial mistaken of the position of "2>&1" ?

2>&1 >> file

should be

>> file 2>&1
1

I use tmux for a multiple window/pane development environment on remote hosts. It's really simple to detach and keep the process running in the background. Have a look at tmux

1

For people using newer versions of the daemon npm module - you need to pass file descriptors instead of strings:

var fs = require('fs');
var stdoutFd = fs.openSync('output.log', 'a');
var stderrFd = fs.openSync('errors.log', 'a');
require('daemon')({
    stdout: stdoutFd, 
    stderr: stderrFd
});
1

If you are using pm2, you can use it with autorestart set to false:

$ pm2 ecosystem

This will generate a sample ecosystem.config.js:

module.exports = {
  apps: [
    {
      script: './scripts/companies.js',
      autorestart: false,
    },
    {
      script: './scripts/domains.js',
      autorestart: false,
    },
    {
      script: './scripts/technologies.js',
      autorestart: false,
    },
  ],
}

$ pm2 start ecosystem.config.js

1

I received the following error when using @mikemaccana's accepted answer on a RHEL 8 AWS EC2 instance: (code=exited, status=216/GROUP)

It was due to using the user/group set to: 'nobody'.

Upon googling, it seems that using user/group as 'nobody'/'nogroup' is bad practice for daemons as answered here on the unix stack exchange.

It worked great after I set user/group to my actual user and group.

You can enter whomai and groups to see your available options to fix this.

My service file for a full stack node app with mongodb:

[Unit]
Description=myapp
After=mongod.service

[Service]
ExecStart=/home/myusername/apps/myapp/root/build/server/index.js
Restart=always
RestartSec=30
User=myusername
Group=myusername
Environment=PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin
Environment=NODE_ENV=production
WorkingDirectory=/home/myusername/apps/myapp

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
1
  • 1
    just remember you can;t bind lower ports like 80 443 !!
    – user956584
    Aug 20, 2022 at 8:42
1

You can run your node app in background with & in unix. Make sure your node app should not have any interactive mode like receive data from input.

node src/index.js -p 1234 --another-options &
3
  • Exactly this does not work for me, because the node seems to have its own handler for hangup, and in that case, running it in background does not help, because it still gets and processes the hangup signal, see stackoverflow.com/questions/64479821/… Jan 9 at 8:44
  • @MatějRačinský Hey! maybe related to your environment. I'm running Linux on my machine at default config. I hadn't any problem about this command. Okay if it doesn't work for you, you will have a lot of approaches. One way is you can use systemd (Linux daemon) or parallel machine 2 machine service (pm2 npm i -g pm2) or nohup, even at Windows you can use some background services like start read more about start in Microsoft docs Jan 17 at 7:19
  • thanks, in the end the disown worked for me and that works like a charm Jan 17 at 23:01
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This answer is quite late to the party, but I found that the best solution was to write a shell script that used the both the screen -dmS and nohup commands.

screen -dmS newScreenName nohup node myserver.js >> logfile.log

I also add the >> logfile bit on the end so I can easily save the node console.log() statements.

Why did I use a shell script? Well I also added in an if statement that checked to see if the node myserver.js process was already running.

That way I was able to create a single command line option that both lets me keep the server going and also restart it when I have made changes, which is very helpful for development.

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    I've run into this problem and am pretty new to Linux. How would you do it without screen or nohup? May 9, 2012 at 20:33

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