Trickier than it seems.
Let's assume that you've already created an unprivileged user named myapp
. You should never run your Node.js applications as root!
Switch to the myapp
user, and do the following:
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.31.0/install.sh | bash
(however, this will immediately run the nvm installer - you probably want to just download theinstall.sh
manually, and inspect it before running it)- Install the latest stable Node.js version:
nvm install stable
Your package.json must specify a start
script, that describes what to execute for your application. For example:
...
"scripts": {
"start": "node app.js"
},
...
Save this as /etc/systemd/system/my-application.service
:
[Unit]
Description=My Application
[Service]
EnvironmentFile=-/etc/default/my-application
ExecStart=/home/myapp/start.sh
WorkingDirectory=/home/myapp/my-application-directory
LimitNOFILE=4096
IgnoreSIGPIPE=false
KillMode=process
User=myapp
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
You'll want to change the User
, Description
and ExecStart
/WorkingDirectory
paths to reflect your application setup.
Next, save this as /home/myapp/start.sh
(adjusting the username in both the path and the script if necessary):
#!/bin/bash
. /home/myapp/.nvm/nvm.sh
npm start
This script is necessary, because we can't load nvm via the service file directly.
Make sure to make it executable:
chmod +x /home/myapp/start.sh
Replace my-application
with whatever you've named your service file after, running the following as root:
systemctl enable my-application
systemctl start my-application
To verify whether your application started successfully (don't forget to npm install
your dependencies!), run:
systemctl status my-application
... which will show you the last few lines of its output, whether it's currently running, and any errors that might have occurred.
Done!