.. _supybot-botchk: ################################ Restarting the bot automatically ################################ This page documents the different ways to automatically restart your bot in case of crash or system reboot or anything that can make the bot quit. Note that you only need to use one. systemd service =============== Using a systemd service is the recommended method to run Limnoira. You need root access as no one has got this to work as user service yet. You must also use systemd as your init system (this is usually the case on Linux). If you don't, skip to the "supybot-botchk" section below. Create a new file ``/etc/systemd/system/.service`` with the following content replacing things were suitable:: [Unit] Description=Supybot After=network.target [Service] Environment="PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/games:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/games:/bin:/sbin:/bin:/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:/opt/local/games TZ=UTC" Type=simple ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/supybot /home/bot/botname/botname.conf ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID Restart=always User=BOTUSERNAME SyslogIdentifier=Supybot [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target Now you should run ``systemctl daemon-reload`` to make systemd aware of changed files and ``systemctl enable .service`` to make the bot start on boot etc. and ``systemctl start .service`` to start the bot. Remember to check the ``Environment`` line. You can get your PATH with ``printf 'PATH=%s\n' "$PATH"``. Some commands ------------- * autostart on boot: ``systemctl enable .service`` * disable autostart on boot: ``systemctl disable .service`` * start the bot: ``systemctl start .service`` * stop the bot: ``systemctl stop .service`` * reload config files: ``systemctl reload .service`` * show the latest logs: ``journalctl -fu .service`` .. _supybot-botchk: supybot-botchk ============== supybot-botchk is a script that comes with Supybot which restarts the bot if it quits or system reboots or anything that causes the bot to quit. It's placed to crontab so cron will run it with scheduled intervals. How to use it? -------------- Configuring the bot ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Start by telling your bot to write a pidfile somewhere where it can write, and restart the bot. For example:: config supybot.pidfile /home///.pid where is replaced with the system username and is replaced with the name of the bot. crontab ^^^^^^^ After the pidfile is configured, you can modify crontab. First you should copy the output of:: printf 'PATH=%s\n' "$PATH" and open crontab with ``EDITOR=nano crontab -e`` and paste the output of previous command to the first lines which don't have comments. This should be on top. You will probably also want to configure locale and timezone which happens by adding the following lines:: # Replace en_US.utf8 with your own locale! You should see list of # available locales with `locale` command, just use something which # ends with "utf8" or "UTF-8" (the latter is required on some operating # systems like OS X). LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 # Specifying timezone is optional, but you probably want to do it if # your system is on different timezone. Replace ``UTC`` with # ``Area/Region`` as it appears in IANA Time Zone Database if you don't # want to use UTC. TZ=UTC NOTE: Lines starting with # are comments and don't need to be written. Now you finally add the bot. If you have multiple bots, simply add separate lines for them all:: */5 * * * * supybot-botchk --botdir=/home/// --pidfile=/home///.pid --conffile=/home///.conf If you needed to use diferent environment for other bot, you could specify that on the same line. For example, my other bot uses en_US.utf8 as locale and UTC as timezone:: */5 * * * * LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 TZ=UTC supybot-botchk --botdir=/home/// --pidfile=/home///.pid --conffile=/home///.conf Note that environment doesn't need to be specified on supybot-botchk line unless it differs from globally specified environment which we added as the first thing to crontab. Now you can save the crontab by pressing ``CTRL + O`` answering ``y`` and then quitting nano with ``CTRL + X``. If you are wondering what ``*/5 * * * *`` means, it simply means "run this every five minutes every day". The 5 can be replaced with any other number and there are also ``@hourly`` etc. which can be used on it's place, but you most likely won't want to wait hour or more if your bot crashes.