Run angular 2/4 application permanently on live server - node.js

Hi i want to know that how to run angular application permanently. means if i run the npm start command on local server. then after it gives a url with port like localhost:4200. but when i close the terminal then my project not run.
Same thing happen with me on live server when i run my command through putty.
ng serve --host {ipadddress}. then it gives me a URL like mysiteip:4200. but when i close putty my site not run. i want to know that how to run angular application permanently.

You could just send process into background by adding &

You can use
forever start node_modules/#angular/cli/bin/ng serve --host {ip_address or domain} --prod
Reference - https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/4951
Instead of this, You can build your app and just drop everything you got in dist folder of your angular app into the directory of the hosting platform.

I would recommend the screen command on linux/unix systems
screen
// New shell opens
ng serve --host {ipadddress}
// Now putty can be closed
This is a terminal that persists and can be continued.
screen -r
// Lists all active screen sessions
screen -r SCREEN_TTY_NO
But I would advise to not use this in a productive environment.

Related

Node app crashes after closing the terminal, even using pm2

I'm doing web automation by using Puppeteer with NodeJS. It works fine when I'm logged in to the terminal. I'm using ec2 instance Ubuntu 22 server.
But when I'm exit out of the terminal and then try to perform the task it just loads and loads and do nothing. But when I log in to check the pm2 logs then it starts working again with the terminal open.
When I check pm2 logs I get this error every time.
Error in pm2 logs:
I suppose there is problem with the command you are trying to run the app. Use the following command to run the app via pm2.
npx pm2 start app
For Cpanel Users having this issue
Login to your WHM account, click on the terminal, cd into the directory where your node js application is, then pm2 start .This was how i solved my issue.

How to restart NodeJS with cPanel

I need to know what to use from root side of cPanel based server to restart NodeJS app, for example, if process terminated now for some reasons NodeJS app will not start until I manually start it, same if server restart I need manually to restart it.
Also, this is case for several accounts on server, command should allow more apps to be restarted/started.
Any help would be great
Here is an automated way to do the it:
- Find if node server [eq. server.js] is running or not.
- If server is not running, restart by "nodemon server.js".
- Else if server is running, do nothing.
You can code this in bash script [sample code below] and set up a CRON job in your cpanel to run it after a particular time.
#!/bin/bash
NAME="server.js" # nodejs script's name here
RUN=`pgrep -f $NAME`
if [ "$RUN" == "" ]; then
nodemon server.js
else
echo "Script is running"
fi
I'd recommend running your node app using PM2.
npm install pm2 -g
pm2 start app.js
pm2 restart app
If you are using node or nodemon on Linux machine I'd recommend using PM2 to manage the service. It is a lot more stable that nodemon and offers other production level features like console.log to console.error file and
https://pm2.io/doc/en/runtime/features/commands-cheatsheet/
I just used a crone job to run the following command once every 5mins
~/bin/node ~/backends/api/app.js
I was having problems with nodemon, it was saying it's not a command blah blah so I thought of just directing straight to node and directly to my app.
This is working for my use case coz the app bails if the addr is being used. So if it crashed then it will restart it since it won't occupy the addr.

Do I need to manually restart my app on EC2 if the server restarts?

This is my first time with EC2 so keep that in mind. I spun an EC2 instance and put a really basic nodejs/express app up on it. I connected to the ec2 server via the terminal on my personal computer and ran node app.js to start the app and everything is running fine. The part I am confused about is how long this will run for. Ideally, I just want it to sit there and not touch it and have it run for hopefully years. Will it do this? If not what do I need to do? What if the server restarts for some reason? What is the common practice here?
Go to root directory of your project and type this command to run the server permanently.
sudo npm install forever -g
forever start -c "node app.js" ./
This blog may be helpful, in setting up node for production environments

deploying nodejs and mongoose app in aws

I'm new to aws and recently I have been able to install node, mongod and also, FTPed project file to the server.
For mongodb,
I'm doing mongo in a separate terminal tab and starting service in another tab. I want to know how can I keep the mongo service running.
For node app,
Right now i'm doing node app in the server. How can I keep it alive too ?
Now the problem, is I open the browser with publicip:portno but nothing happens. How can I locate app and run it in the browser.
my app structure is
/
node
mongo
server.js and app related files
Using the Linux/Unix nohup command allows you to start commands that ignore the signals associated with the controlling terminal process terminating (SIGHUP). Adding the & to the command allows that command to run in the background and sending the output to /dev/null will ensure that your disk does not fill up with unnecessary log output. Here are some commands that should work:
nohup mongod >/dev/null &
node server.js >/dev/null &
This is more of a Linux/Unix command line issue I think. You can use the node module called forever to run your Node.js process in the background easily.
npm install -g forever
forever start YourScript.js
You can place an & at the end of the mongod command to place it in the background.
Ensure that in your node app you have the command app.listen("port number");
This is the "port number" that you should be using in your browser to render the page with the elastic IP from your AWS instance. Make sure that your elastic IP is configured to accept inbound requests.
To keep the service/app running in the background you can run the screen command then launch ur app/service (e.g. mongod OR node app.js). In the same terminal that your app is running press control + a + d, you should see
(detached)
printed on your screen.
This should keep your app/service running in the background.

How do I leave Node.js server on EC2 running forever?

As you can tell by my question, I'm new to this...
I built my first website, I set up my first Node.js server to serve it and then pushed everything live on EC2.
I tested everything on my EC2 IP address and everything seems to be working.
Now up until now, I've been testing my app locally so it makes sense that whenever I closed the terminal, app.js would stop running so nothing would be served on localhost.
Now that my server is on EC2, the same thing happens ("obviously" one could say..) whenever I close my terminal.
So my question is how do I keep my Node.js server running on EC2 for like... forever..so that my site stays live.. forever :)
I read something about a node module called "forever" but I'm wondering (being new and all..) why isn't this "forever" functionality a default setting of the Node.js-EC2 system ?
I mean, correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the whole point of setting up a web server and pushing it live to have it stay live forever? Isn't that what servers are supposed to do anyway (infinitely listening for requests) ? And if that's the case why do we need extra modules/settings to achieve that ?
Thanks for your help.. As you can tell I'm not only looking for a solution but an explanation as well because I got really confused.. :-)
EDIT (a few details you might need) - After installing my app on EC2 these are the steps that I follow on the terminal (The app is running on Amazon Linux by the way) :
I type ssh -i xxxxxxxxxxx.pem ec2-user#ec2-xx-xx-xx-x.eu-west-1.compute.amazonaws.com on the
terminal
After logging onto the Amazon machine I then go to the relevant folder and execute node app.js
There are 3 folders in the machine : node, node_modules and *name of my app*
app.js resides in *name of my app*
After that, the site goes live on my EC2 IP
Once I close the terminal, everything is switched off
Before you invoke Node.js, run the command:
screen
This will create a persistent environment which will allow your process to keep running after you disconnect.
When you reconnect, you can use this command to reconnect to that environment:
screen -r
Here's a random link to learn more about screen:
http://www.rackaid.com/blog/linux-screen-tutorial-and-how-to/
However, this won't help you if your EC2 instance restarts. There are many different ways to do that. Adding your startup command to /etc/rc.local is one way. Here's a link to an Amazon guide which includes adding something to /etc/rc.local.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/building-shared-amis.html
I worked with the valid answer for a while but some times the screen just end with no reason also screen has no balance loader and others features that in a production enviroment you should care , Currently I use a npm component to do this job.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/pm2
This is so easy to use.
$ npm install pm2 -g
then just start your app with pm2 like this
$ pm2 start app.js
In the above link you can find diferents tasks to perform if you need.
Hope this help the newbies like me.
There's a better way. Use forever.js.
See it here: https://github.com/foreverjs/forever
This is a nice tutorial for how to use chkconfig with forever on CENTOS.
http://aronduby.com/starting-node-forever-scripts-at-boot-w-centos/
Or use tmux
Just Enter a tmux screen run node server
Ctrl+b Hit D and you're done.
I am very late to join the thread and seems its basic problem with every newbie. Follow the below to setup properly your first server.
follow the step on the ec2 instance(before doing this make sure you have a start script for pm2 in your package.json file):
npm install pm2 -g
pm2 startup systemd
See the output and at the last line it must be like..
You have to run this command as root. Execute the following command:
sudo env PATH=$PATH:/usr/bin /usr/lib/node_modules/pm2/bin/pm2 startup
systemd -u sammy --hp /home/sammy
Take the last line command and run again with root privilege.
(before running the next command, Provide a new start script for pm2 in your package.json file e.g: "pm2-start": "pm2 start ./bin/www")
npm run pm2-start
for more info follow the link.
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-a-node-js-application-for-production-on-ubuntu-16-04
If you are using a Ubuntu EC2, better to use the following we have been using this for the past 6 years and have had no issues with this.
sudo npm i -g forever
Now start your main, example
forever start index.js
forever start src/server.js
To stop the server use the following command
forever stop index.js
To list multiple servers running forever
forever listall

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