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Right now I'm using screen in order to run my command yarn run dev-server.

I'm looking for an equivalent to something like: forever start app.js

Except for yarn run dev-server.

dev-server in package.json is = "dev-server": "webpack-dev-server"

As everyone knows if the program crashes in screen it doesn't automatically restart.

Side note, it's a react web framework.

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  • Vote on this proposal to ease the tag confusion around [yarn] and [yarnpkg].
    – leonheess
    Feb 11, 2020 at 16:32

2 Answers 2

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On an Ubuntu server, I would recommend to use systemd for running your NodeJs application.

This article has some examples how you can write a systemd unit file. If the process dies, systemd will detect it and automatically restart it.

Untested (but to sketch the idea):

[Unit]
Description=Example server

[Service]
WorkingDirectory=/path/to/my/server
ExecStart=/usr/bin/yarn run dev-server

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Although running it through yarn is a bit weird. In a production setup, I have not seen it. Normally, you execute the server by directly running it with node (e.g., node server.js).

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  • Its odd because the script doesn't work with node, only yarn. Nov 21, 2019 at 22:37
  • @MarcAlexander webpack-dev-server is normally for development only. I have only seen it being used on local developer's machine. When you run commands through yarn (or npm), it can use binaries in node_modules. I think, in your case it calls the node_modules/.bin/webpack-dev-server binary in the end (source: webpack.js.org/configuration/dev-server ) Nov 21, 2019 at 23:11
  • I see. This isn't my script. A client wants me to put it up to demo purposes and I don't want it to crash and not restart on them. Nov 22, 2019 at 17:56
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You can use PM2

PM2 is a daemon process manager that will help you manage and keep your application online 24/7 And for the use with yarn

pm2 start yarn --interpreter bash --name api -- start
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  • You don't need bash for this. A simple pm2 start yarn -- run dev-server would work just fine. And Oh, there's a mistake in your example - the arguments are run dev-server not start
    – slebetman
    Nov 22, 2019 at 9:05

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