I'm trying to find out where PM2 saves the log files by default?
I'm working with a Linux Ubuntu 16.04 server and I've installed it globally with npm i pm2 -g.
pm2 saves logs to $HOME/.pm2/logs/XXX-err.log by default, where XXX is your pm2 app name
I wanted to see the logs for different processes. There is a console-based UI for this:
pm2 monit
Extra tips for pm2 newbies:
Launch multiple, co-ordinated, instance per cpu core with: pm2 start myApp.js -i max
Beware the 'js' example of cluster configuration; it didn't work for me. Try 'json' instead.
By default, you need to leave user logged in to keep cluster running
Handy commands:
pm2 start all (also stop / delete)
pm2 list
Type pm2 log in a shell and you get an overview of the last 15 log lines and the last 15 error lines in realtime. At the top of these log lines, the location of your logfile is shown. You can also type pm2 log --lines 1000 to show more lines, in this case 1000.
$pm2 log
$pm2 log --lines 500
To exit, just type ctrl-c
A great way to get information on logfile location (and other useful info) is to do a "pm2 describe" on the process that you have running. You can use this method running pm2 as a standard user or if you use it as sudo pm2.
Get the name or id of the process
pm2 list
use describe by either using the id# or the name
pm2 describe 0
pm2 has two types of log files for every app that it runs, an error log file and an out log file.
The error logs are saved to $HOME/.pm2/logs/XXX-error.log or ~/.pm2/logs/XXX-error.log
While the out logs are saved to $HOME/.pm2/logs/XXX-out.log or ~/.pm2/logs/XXX-access.log.
Where XXX is the name of your app.
Related
I am using pm2 for managing node processes on one of the servers.
The package is here: https://pm2.keymetrics.io/
It is open source and available both on npmjs and GitHub.
I can easily install it every time using: npm i pm2 -g
I love pm2, and not just node processes, I write bash scripts and run them as cron under pm2 and I can easily check the logs.
Some commands:
pm2 --name "process-name" start "bash script.sh"
pm2 --name "node-process" start "node main.js"
pm2 logs node-process
pm2 stop node-process
pm2 restart node-process
There are 2 more commands which are very useful to start pm2 on startup with all the processes automatically.
pm2 startup Will generate startup script.
pm2 save Will update start script with current processes.
Everything is good. But, today I got into a problem.
I am running all pm2 node processes from a folder /mnt/node.
What I want is that I have synced that /mnt/node folder to another server and I am trying to find a way to move all pm2 processes automatically to another server without writing each process once again.
May be someone can help.
You can do this.
On the source server:
pm2 save
copy file saved on ~/.pm2/dump.pm2 to destination server, then:
pm2 resurrect
Haven't try this between two differents server yet but i think it will be ok.
in an Ubuntu Server, I am unable to run the node.js app in cluster mode using PM2.
The command I use is :
PM2 start server.js --name Server -i max
When I list the PM2 processes, I can see the Server has Error status.
I have tried looking into the log file generated by PM2 but it's empty.
I am however able to run the same server.js without the cluster mode using :
PM2 start server.js --name Server
doing PM2 Kill and starting all the services again was the solution to above issue.
You could also have used pm2 restart Server to restart it
If you use pm2 kill you will just kill all processes, to clean up afterwards i would recommend to use pm2 flush so all logfiles will be reset
I have gone through this same kind of situations but in my case pm2 is showing error status cause of error in my code.
use the below command
pm2 logs
pm2 logs command helped me by showing some hints to check where exactly the error is occured.
if everything works fine then pm2 list will show you the status online.
you can check the ports running by pm2(not only pm2 but all the process) using below command
sudo netstat -tulpn
I have my app running on http://talkwithstranger.com/ and I have deployed it on AWS EC2. I use this command
sudo nohup node index.js &
To continue running my Node JS server even if I close my terminal and exit my SSH.
However, after 2 days everytime I wake up and I find out that the node server itself stops automatically. I checked the running processes by using
ps -ef
and my node script is not there.
Google Chrome say site DNS not found, because NodeJS Express is not running of course to serve my html file, but why it stops itself?
What is causing this unexpected shutdown of my server after every 2 days? I have to manually run nohup again to run it again.
Does nohup has a time to expire or something ?
You should run node.js using a service / process manager. You can use something basic such as forever or supervisord but I would actually advise you to take a look at PM2.
It can do a lot of things - one of them being that it manages your process, makes sure it keeps running, restarts it when it fails, manages the logs, etc. You can also have it autostart when you restart the server.
It becomes really powerful in combination with https://pm2.io, because this enables you to monitor your server's metrics such as CPU and memory remotely and see whether exceptions happened, and much more (such as even remotely updating the software by pulling from git). However, they no longer offer a free plan unfortunately - their plans now start at $79/month, which is a pity. But don't worry, the PM2 application itself is still free and open source, only the monitoring costs money.
Basic usage of PM2:
npm install -g pm2
...to install PM2.
pm2 start my_script.js
Starts a script and lets it run in background.
pm2 status
Shows the status of any running scripts.
pm2 restart all
Restarts all running scripts.
pm2 kill
Stops all scripts and completely shuts down the PM2 daemon.
pm2 monit
Monitors CPU/RAM usage and shows it.
pm2 logs
Shows the last 20 output and error log lines and starts streaming live logs to the console. The logs are stored in the folder ~/.pm2/logs.
Using PM2, your script will not stop - at most, it will restart. And if it does you will be able to more easily understand why because you can easily access logs and watch what happenes with memory usage, etc.
Extra tips:
To avoid filling up the harddisk with logfiles, I recommend installing the module pm2-logrotate:
pm2 install pm2-logrotate
To automatically launch PM2 with the same script on startup when the server starts, you can first save the current configuration:
pm2 save
...and then use the following command to install a startup script - follow the instructions displayed, which will be different based on the exact OS you are using:
pm2 startup
To use PM2 in a more advanced way with multiple processes, custom environment variables, etc., take a look at ecosystem files.
You can try forever.Install using the following command.
npm install -g forever
Then just start forever:
forever start index.js
Another better option for production use is pm2.You can install pm2 with below command
npm install -g pm2
# or
yarn global add pm2
start server
pm2 start index.js
The best thing is you can achieve load balancing with pm2(utilize all available CPU)
pm2 start index.js -i max
For more info, you can visit pm2 documentation page.
I have a node chat application that needs to keep running on my server (ubuntu with nginx). The problem is that the application stops after a few hours or days.
When I check on the server I see that my pm2 list is empty.
The code I use to start my app:
pm2 start notification_server/index.js
It somehow looks as if pm2 is reset after a while. I also tried using forever, but then I run into the same problem. Is there some way to prevent the pm2 list from getting empty?
This is most likely an indication that your server is rebooting. When your server reboots, PM2 shuts down and deletes all Node instances from its "status" list.
You can perform the following steps to make PM2 relaunch your Node programs start back up on reboot:
Run pm2 startup and follow the directions (you will have to perform a sudo command; PM will tell you exactly what to do).
Through pm2 start, get your Node processes up and running just like you like them.
Run pm2 save to register the current state of things as what you want to see on system startup.
Source: http://pm2.keymetrics.io/docs/usage/startup/
Did you try checking logs $ pm2 logs for you application?
Most likely it will tell you why your application was terminated or maybe it just exited as it supposed to. You could find something like that there:
PM2 | App [app] with id [0] and pid [11982], exited with code [1] via signal [SIGINT]
This can tell you what happened. Without more details, it's hard to give you a better answer.
I am running a forever process for Node.js server but after one day the server stops the process.My server is running on Ubuntu platform. I have done the following process:
First I installed npm install forever and ran the command forever start server.js. I need the server to run for all the time but after one day I am seeing the server stops working.
Please help me to resolve this issue.
I would like to suggest that you try PM2 instead. Here's the short tutorial I wrote about it: http://www.nikola-breznjak.com/blog/nodejs/using-pm2-to-run-your-node-js-apps-like-a-pro/.
edit:
As per StackOverflow's policy I'm including the content from the post here also:
Running your Node.js application by hand is, well, not the way we roll. Imagine restarting the app every time something happens, or god forbid application crashes in the middle of the night and you find about it only in the morning – ah the horror. PM2 solves this by:
allowing you to keep applications alive forever
reloading applications without downtime
facilitating common system admin tasks
To install PM2, run the following command:
sudo npm install pm2 -g
To start your process with PM2, run the following command (once in the root of your application):
pm2 start server.js
As you can see from the output shown on the image below, PM2 automatically assigns an App name (based on the filename, without the .js extension) and a PM2 id. PM2 also maintains other information, such as the PID of the process, its current status, and memory usage.
As I mentioned before, the application running under PM2 will be restarted automatically if the application crashes or is killed, but an additional step needs to be taken to get the application to launch on system startup (boot or reboot). The command to do that is the following:
pm2 startup ubuntu
The output of this command will instruct you to execute an additional command which will enable the actual startup on boot or reboot. In my case the note for the additional command was:
sudo env PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/bin pm2 startup ubuntu -u nikola