284

Searching on Google reveals x2 code snippets. The first result is to this code recipe which has a lot of documentation and explanation, along with some useful discussion underneath.

However, another code sample, whilst not containing so much documentation, includes sample code for passing commands such as start, stop and restart. It also creates a PID file which can be handy for checking if the daemon is already running etc.

These samples both explain how to create the daemon. Are there any additional things that need to be considered? Is one sample better than the other, and why?

3
  • 1
    I've always found daemonization code unneeded. Why not just let the shell do it? Nov 13, 2010 at 20:12
  • 19
    Because it doesn't do setsid or setpgrp.
    – bmargulies
    Mar 24, 2011 at 1:26
  • 4
    Use supervisord.org. This way you don't need to fork() or redirect you stdin/stderr. Just write a normal program.
    – guettli
    Oct 1, 2013 at 9:02

16 Answers 16

206

Current solution

A reference implementation of PEP 3143 (Standard daemon process library) is now available as python-daemon.

Historical answer

Sander Marechal's code sample is superior to the original, which was originally posted in 2004. I once contributed a daemonizer for Pyro, but would probably use Sander's code if I had to do it over.

7
  • 75
    Edit: Since I originally posted this reply, a reference implementation of PEP 3143 in now available: pypi.python.org/pypi/python-daemon Jan 28, 2011 at 18:45
  • @JeffBauer Original link has died, I remember it being useful, you wouldn't happen to know a live link for that would you?
    – CrazyCasta
    Feb 25, 2014 at 19:43
  • 1
    @CrazyCasta: Sander Marechal's version is still available on the Wayback Machine Feb 25, 2014 at 21:26
  • 1
    @JeffBauer: Sander's code is still better than http://pypi.python.org/pypi/python-daemon. More reliable. Just one example : try to start two times the same daemon with python-daemon : big ugly error. With Sander's code : a nice notice "Daemon already running."
    – Basj
    Jan 17, 2016 at 20:50
  • 2
    Since the "python-daemon" module documentation is still missing (see also many other SO questions) and is rather obscure (how to start/stop properly a daemon from command line with this module?), I modified Sander Marechal's code sample to add quit() method that gets executed before the daemon is stopped. Here it is.
    – Basj
    Nov 12, 2016 at 10:30
173

There are many fiddly things to take care of when becoming a well-behaved daemon process:

  • prevent core dumps (many daemons run as root, and core dumps can contain sensitive information)

  • behave correctly inside a chroot gaol

  • set UID, GID, working directory, umask, and other process parameters appropriately for the use case

  • relinquish elevated suid, sgid privileges

  • close all open file descriptors, with exclusions depending on the use case

  • behave correctly if started inside an already-detached context, such as init, inetd, etc.

  • set up signal handlers for sensible daemon behaviour, but also with specific handlers determined by the use case

  • redirect the standard streams stdin, stdout, stderr since a daemon process no longer has a controlling terminal

  • handle a PID file as a cooperative advisory lock, which is a whole can of worms in itself with many contradictory but valid ways to behave

  • allow proper cleanup when the process is terminated

  • actually become a daemon process without leading to zombies

Some of these are standard, as described in canonical Unix literature (Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment, by the late W. Richard Stevens, Addison-Wesley, 1992). Others, such as stream redirection and PID file handling, are conventional behaviour most daemon users would expect but that are less standardised.

All of these are covered by the PEP 3143 “Standard daemon process library” specification. The python-daemon reference implementation works on Python 2.7 or later, and Python 3.2 or later.

3
  • 26
    “gaol” is spelled correctly, because that's how W. Richard Stevens spelled it :-)
    – bignose
    Feb 22, 2011 at 7:51
  • 7
    Gaol is an English thing. The poster is from Australia so it makes sense.
    – devin
    Nov 26, 2012 at 18:35
  • 1
    Any plans on making a py3k friendly version? Mar 12, 2013 at 14:35
111

Here's my basic 'Howdy World' Python daemon that I start with, when I'm developing a new daemon application.

#!/usr/bin/python
import time
from daemon import runner

class App():
    def __init__(self):
        self.stdin_path = '/dev/null'
        self.stdout_path = '/dev/tty'
        self.stderr_path = '/dev/tty'
        self.pidfile_path =  '/tmp/foo.pid'
        self.pidfile_timeout = 5
    def run(self):
        while True:
            print("Howdy!  Gig'em!  Whoop!")
            time.sleep(10)

app = App()
daemon_runner = runner.DaemonRunner(app)
daemon_runner.do_action()

Note that you'll need the python-daemon library. You can install it by:

pip install python-daemon

Then just start it with ./howdy.py start, and stop it with ./howdy.py stop.

11
  • 5
    That daemon module you import is not a standard part of Python (yet). It needs to be installed with pip install python-daemon or equivalent.
    – Nate
    Feb 10, 2012 at 23:50
  • 6
    I installed python-daemon as you described, but when I try to run my app (same as your last 3 lines), I get ImportError: cannot import name runner Feb 25, 2012 at 14:16
  • 4
    This suggestion seems to be obsolete -- as of September 2013, anyway, python.org/dev/peps/pep-3143 makes no mention of a "runner" that can be imported. This of course would explain @Nostradamnit's observation.
    – offby1
    Sep 4, 2013 at 21:44
  • 2
    This still works fine for me, in September 2013, on Ubuntu 13.04, with stock Python packages, python2.7 and python-daemon installed. With python3, however, I see error, " from daemon import runner ImportError: No module named 'daemon'" Sep 5, 2013 at 16:19
  • 1
    I am getting following error io.UnsupportedOperation: File or stream is not seekable.
    – alper
    Apr 30, 2020 at 13:46
48

An alternative -- create a normal, non-daemonized Python program then externally daemonize it using supervisord. This can save a lot of headaches, and is *nix- and language-portable.

5
  • 1
    I think this is the best way. Especially if you want to run several daemons on one operating system. Don't code, reuse.
    – guettli
    Oct 1, 2013 at 8:59
  • It simplifies a lot of issues. I've written true daemons -- they aren't easy. Oct 1, 2013 at 13:35
  • 1
    The best answer is hidden here :) Sep 14, 2015 at 13:16
  • 1
    This is gold. After spending hours trying to run through python-daemon, this is the out of the box solution that works for me. Great documentation and examples made my daemon up and running in few mins. Oct 11, 2016 at 12:40
  • Or, of you're using a modern Linux, run your program as a systemd-service...
    – Mikhail T.
    Aug 8, 2021 at 17:53
44

Note the python-daemon package which solves a lot of problems behind daemons out of the box.

Among other features it enables to (from Debian package description):

  • Detach the process into its own process group.
  • Set process environment appropriate for running inside a chroot.
  • Renounce suid and sgid privileges.
  • Close all open file descriptors.
  • Change the working directory, uid, gid, and umask.
  • Set appropriate signal handlers.
  • Open new file descriptors for stdin, stdout, and stderr.
  • Manage a specified PID lock file.
  • Register cleanup functions for at-exit processing.
28

Probably not a direct answer to the question, but systemd can be used to run your application as a daemon. Here is an example:

[Unit]
Description=Python daemon
After=syslog.target
After=network.target

[Service]
Type=simple
User=<run as user>
Group=<run as group group>
ExecStart=/usr/bin/python <python script home>/script.py

# Give the script some time to startup
TimeoutSec=300

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

I prefer this method because a lot of the work is done for you, and then your daemon script behaves similarly to the rest of your system.

1
  • 3
    This is the proper and sane way. 1) Needs to be saved to /etc/systemd/system/control.service 2) managed sudo systemctl start control.service
    – jimper
    May 12, 2020 at 4:56
8

This function will transform an application to a daemon:

import sys
import os

def daemonize():
    try:
        pid = os.fork()
        if pid > 0:
            # exit first parent
            sys.exit(0)
    except OSError as err:
        sys.stderr.write('_Fork #1 failed: {0}\n'.format(err))
        sys.exit(1)
    # decouple from parent environment
    os.chdir('/')
    os.setsid()
    os.umask(0)
    # do second fork
    try:
        pid = os.fork()
        if pid > 0:
            # exit from second parent
            sys.exit(0)
    except OSError as err:
        sys.stderr.write('_Fork #2 failed: {0}\n'.format(err))
        sys.exit(1)
    # redirect standard file descriptors
    sys.stdout.flush()
    sys.stderr.flush()
    si = open(os.devnull, 'r')
    so = open(os.devnull, 'w')
    se = open(os.devnull, 'w')
    os.dup2(si.fileno(), sys.stdin.fileno())
    os.dup2(so.fileno(), sys.stdout.fileno())
    os.dup2(se.fileno(), sys.stderr.fileno())
8

YapDi is a python package. It can be used to convert a python script into daemon mode from inside the script.

7

since python-daemon has not yet supported python 3.x, and from what can be read on the mailing list, it may never will, i have written a new implementation of PEP 3143: pep3143daemon

pep3143daemon should support at least python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.x

It also contains a PidFile class.

The library only depends on the standard library and on the six module.

It can be used as a drop in replacement for python-daemon.

Here is the documentation.

6

I am afraid the daemon module mentioned by @Dustin didn't work for me. Instead I installed python-daemon and used the following code:

# filename myDaemon.py
import sys
import daemon
sys.path.append('/home/ubuntu/samplemodule') # till __init__.py
from samplemodule import moduleclass 

with daemon.DaemonContext():
    moduleclass.do_running() # I have do_running() function and whatever I was doing in __main__() in module.py I copied in it.

Running is easy

> python myDaemon.py

just for completeness here is samplemodule directory content

>ls samplemodule
__init__.py __init__.pyc moduleclass.py

The content of moduleclass.py can be

class moduleclass():
    ...

def do_running():
    m = moduleclass()
    # do whatever daemon is required to do.
3

One more to thing to think about when daemonizing in python:

If your are using python logging and you want to continue using it after daemonizing, make sure to call close() on the handlers (particularly the file handlers).

If you don't do this the handler can still think it has files open, and your messages will simply disappear - in other words make sure the logger knows its files are closed!

This assumes when you daemonise you are closing ALL the open file descriptors indiscriminatingly - instead you could try closing all but the log files (but it's usually simpler to close all then reopen the ones you want).

2
  • Do you think opening a new logging handler is better than passing the logging handler through to the daemon using the DaemonContext's files_preserve option for example ? May 19, 2014 at 16:49
  • You are only closing the logger, you aren't creating a new one (it'll just re-open it when it needs to). But even though it's really easy to do that, it might be better to use the DaemonContext as it's probably doing some other clever things (assuming preserving still allows proper daemonization). May 21, 2014 at 10:04
3

Though you may prefer the pure Python solution provided by the python-daemon module, there is a daemon(3) function in libc -- at least, on BSD and Linux -- which will do the right thing.

Calling it from python is easy:

import ctypes

ctypes.CDLL(None).daemon(0, 0) # Read the man-page for the arguments' meanings

The only remaining thing to do is creation (and locking) of the PID-file. But that you can handle yourself...

2

I modified a few lines in Sander Marechal's code sample (mentioned by @JeffBauer in the accepted answer) to add a quit() method that gets executed before the daemon is stopped. This is sometimes very useful.

Here it is.

Note: I don't use the "python-daemon" module because the documentation is still missing (see also many other SO questions) and is rather obscure (how to start/stop properly a daemon from command line with this module?)

-1

After a few years and many attempts (I tried all the answers given here, but all of them had minor drawbacks at the end), now I realize that there is a better way than wanting to start, stop, restart a daemon directly from Python: use the OS tools instead.

For example, for Linux, instead of doing python myapp start and python myapp stop, I do this to start the app:

screen -S myapp python myapp.py    
# CTRL+A, D to detach

or screen -dmS myapp python myapp.py to start and detach it in one command.

Then:

screen -r myapp

to attach to this terminal again. Once in the terminal, it's possible to use CTRL+C to stop it.

1
  • This is useless if you want/need to run the daemon automatically, for example at system start. Also, it requires a terminal, which isn't quite what a "daemon" is all about. Apr 2, 2023 at 22:33
-2

The easiest way to create daemon with Python is to use the Twisted event-driven framework. It handles all of the stuff necessary for daemonization for you. It uses the Reactor Pattern to handle concurrent requests.

3
  • 5
    That's far too big a hammer to use. Most people just want to run a short Python script they wrote as a daemon. python-daemon, as described above, is the correct answer.
    – Tom Swirly
    Mar 5, 2012 at 21:59
  • 3
    Although this answer was quite arrogant, it was useful.
    – fiatjaf
    Nov 17, 2012 at 13:36
  • "easiest" and "Twisted" in one sentence… Apr 2, 2023 at 22:34
-31

80% of the time, when folks say "daemon", they only want a server. Since the question is perfectly unclear on this point, it's hard to say what the possible domain of answers could be. Since a server is adequate, start there. If an actual "daemon" is actually needed (this is rare), read up on nohup as a way to daemonize a server.

Until such time as an actual daemon is actually required, just write a simple server.

Also look at the WSGI reference implementation.

Also look at the Simple HTTP Server.

"Are there any additional things that need to be considered? " Yes. About a million things. What protocol? How many requests? How long to service each request? How frequently will they arrive? Will you use a dedicated process? Threads? Subprocesses? Writing a daemon is a big job.

12
  • 13
    Neither of those libraries even do a single fork(), let alone two. They have nothing to do with daemonization. Oct 22, 2010 at 16:31
  • 9
    On Unix operating systems, a “daemon” process — like the aerial attendants that the Greeks called “daemons” — is one that “stands to the side.” Instead of directly serving a single user through that user's TTY, a daemon belongs to no TTY, but can answer requests from many users on the system, or — like crond or syslogd — does housekeeping services for the entire system. To create a daemon process, one must at least perform a double-fork() with all file descriptors closed, so that one is immune to signals from all controlling terminals, including the system console. See bignose's answer. Sep 6, 2011 at 4:08
  • 6
    @S Lott — “a server” describes what a process does (listens for incoming requests instead of initiating its own actions); “a daemon” describes how a process runs (without a window or a controlling terminal). SimpleHTTPServer is indeed a server, but one that does not natively know how to daemonize itself (you can Ctrl-C it, for example). nohup is a utility to daemonize a naive process — so your nohupped server is indeed both a daemon and a server, exactly as you claim. This Stack Overflow question was essentially asking: “How can I implement nohup in Python?” Sep 7, 2011 at 14:40
  • 5
    Yes it does but my understanding of the OPs question is that he wants to do the daemonisation from within his python program and without using a something else. Sep 7, 2011 at 18:47
  • 4
    @S Lott — You need not be impressed! The author of every other answer knew what “daemon” meant, so my ability to interpret this question is hardly unique. :) And where did you get the idea that I want the author to re-invent a wheel? I think nohup is a fine tool, and I will remove my -1 vote if you simply move that useful idea up into your actual answer. In fact, if you mention supervisord and how it will also save the author from having to do logging, a start-stop script, and restart throttling, then I'll even +1 you. :) Sep 8, 2011 at 13:41

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