Look at LSB init scripts for more information.
Copy to /etc/init.d:
# replace "$YOUR_SERVICE_NAME" with your service's name (whenever it's not enough obvious)
cp "service.sh" "/etc/init.d/$YOUR_SERVICE_NAME"
chmod +x /etc/init.d/$YOUR_SERVICE_NAMEEdit the script and replace following tokens:
- <NAME>=- $YOUR_SERVICE_NAME
- <DESCRIPTION>= Describe your service here (be concise)
- Feel free to modify the LSB header, I've made default choices you may not agree with
- <COMMAND>= Command to start your server (for example- /home/myuser/.dropbox-dist/dropboxd)
- <USER>= Login of the system user the script should be run as (for example- myuser)
Start and test your service:
service $YOUR_SERVICE_NAME start
service $YOUR_SERVICE_NAME stopInstall service to be run at boot-time:
update-rc.d $YOUR_SERVICE_NAME defaultsEnjoy
The service can uninstall itself with service $NAME uninstall. Yes, that's very easy, therefore a bit dangerous. But as it's an auto-generated script, you can bring it back very easily. I use it for tests and often install/uninstall, that's why I've put that here.
Don't want it? Remove lines 56-58 of the service's script.
Your service will log its output to /var/log/$NAME.log. Don't forget to setup a logrotate :)
Yep, I'm lazy too. But still, I've written a script to automate this :)
wget -O new-service.sh 'http://git.io/vu0NT' && bash new-service.shIn this script I will download service.sh into a tempfile, replace some tokens, and then show you commands you should run as superuser.
If you feel confident enough with my script, you can sudo the script directly:
wget -O new-service.sh 'http://git.io/vu0NT' && sudo bash new-service.shNote: the cool hipsterish curl $URL | bash won't work here, I don't really want to check why.
Creating the service:
Looking at service files (logs, pid):
Uninstalling service:


