- Info here: http://cr.yp.to/daemontools.html
- github
- Original djb version: http://cr.yp.to/daemontools/daemontools-0.76.tar.gz
daemontools
is a collection of tools for managingUNIX
services. It monitorsqmail
services and saves error messages to one or more logs.
Changelog
- Dec 9, 2023
-moved my patched daemontools to github and named 0.77 the new version
-clear service moved to qmail/supervise/clear - Sep 3, 2023
-Buffer Overflow fixed in timestamp.c (patch multilog-readable_datetime, Ubuntu 22.04). It was causing empty log files. (thanks Bai Borko and KPC) - Jun 30, 2023
-added my multilog_readable-datetime patch which replaces the timestamp in the log lines with a human readable datetime:
2023-06-28 16:17:26.501272173 tcpserver: status: 0/200/0
Do not install it if you prefer to stick with the timestamp.
- if you install this patch you have to download again theconvert-multilog
program. In case you decide to stick with the original timestamp, then use the originalone
. (diff)
- Finally you have to adjust this line in your qmail-smtpd/log/run and qmail-smtpsd/log/run files:- n5 s16777215 '-*' '+* qlog*' !/usr/local/bin/archive_qmail_qlog $LOGDIRQLOG + n5 s16777215 '-*' '+*qlog*' !/usr/local/bin/archive_qmail_qlog $LOGDIRQLOG
note the missing blank space before 'qlog'.
Patches applied
The daemontools
that we are going to install is the result of the original djb daemontools-0.76
plus the following patches;
errno
patch-
The
multilog_filesize_limit
patch (thanks to Sam Tang), which extends the file log size limit to 100MB (default is 16MB). -
My
multilog-readable_datetime
patch, which replaces the timestamp with a human readable datetime. Do not install it if you prefer to stick with the timestamp. Here is what the log lines will look like with the patcheddaemontools:
@40000000649b607828223d14 tcpserver: status: 0/200/0 will be 2023-06-28 16:17:26.501272173 tcpserver: status: 0/200/0
Installation
First of all, let's create the folder which will host qmail
, daemontools
and ucspi-tcp
:
mkdir /var/qmail
In this guide I will assume that all the source packages have been downloaded into the /usr/local/src folder.
SRC=/usr/local/src DAEMONTOOLS_VER=0.77 cd $SRC wget https://github.com/sagredo-dev/daemontools/archive/refs/tags/v${DAEMONTOOLS_VER}.tar.gz tar xzf v${DAEMONTOOLS_VER}.tar.gz
Install daemontools:
cd /var/qmail mkdir admin chmod 1755 admin cd admin cp -rp ${SRC}/daemontools-${DAEMONTOOLS_VER}/admin/daemontools-${DAEMONTOOLS_VER} . cd daemontools-${DAEMONTOOLS_VER} chown -R root:root . package/install
So we have daemontools
in /var/qmail/admin/daemontools
Add the "clear" service, so that you can easily clear the readproctitle service errors
line:
mkdir -p /var/qmail/supervise/clear touch /var/qmail/supervise/clear/down cat > /var/qmail/supervise/clear/run << __EOF__ #!/bin/sh yes '' | head -4000 | tr '\n' . __EOF__ chmod +x /var/qmail/supervise/clear/run
Running daemontools
at boot time
The command /command/svcscanboot will be added in your /etc/inittab. It will be sufficient to run qmail
at boot time.
On systemd
based OS the above command has to be added to rc.local in order to be executed at boot time, supposing that rc.local is executed at boot time, or you can choose to create a specific daemontools.service
as follows:
cat > /etc/systemd/system/daemontools.service << __EOF__ [Unit] Description=Daemontools service supervision ConditionPathExists=/command/svscanboot [Service] ExecStart=/command/svscanboot Restart=always [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target __EOF__ systemctl enable daemontools.service systemctl start daemontools.service
Comments
correction
Ivelin Topalov March 7, 2024 20:37 CET
this line also has same 3 hidden chars 9see in hex)
Reply | Permalink
correction
Roberto Puzzanghera Ivelin Topalov March 7, 2024 20:54 CET
Thank you. I retyped those string
Reply | Permalink
correction
Ivelin Topalov March 7, 2024 20:33 CET
this line somehow has 3 hidden bytes (copy it and look in hex) which makes it wrong
Reply | Permalink
suggestion to insert install of build-essentials etc on this page.
GoofY March 4, 2023 09:06 CET
is it an idea to put the following already here instead of on page installing and configuring vpopmail?:
Reply | Permalink
suggestion to insert install of build-essentials etc on this page.
Roberto Puzzanghera GoofY March 4, 2023 19:55 CET
I created a page with the preinstallation tasks, where this and other preliminary tasks are covered. Fill free to post other hints
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suggestion to insert install of build-essentials etc on this page.
Roberto Puzzanghera GoofY March 4, 2023 09:09 CET
ok, inserted
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make: not found
Thuan March 5, 2020 04:18 CET
Hi everybody .
i had a problem need your help :
- when i run a command line :
i see :
help me , pls .
thanks.
Reply | Permalink
make: not found
Roberto Puzzanghera Thuan March 5, 2020 07:56 CET
I think that you should install autotools. Please refer to your distribution's documentation for the purpose
Reply | Permalink
attribute eXecute to "run" file
Marco Varanda February 16, 2020 14:43 CET
Hello,
I´m doing a procedure to install qmail to CentOS 8 (systemd)
run file gets 644 attribute, should we change to 744 ?
Thanks for your work !
Marco Varanda
Reply | Permalink
attribute eXecute to
Roberto Puzzanghera Marco Varanda February 16, 2020 14:58 CET
yes
Reply | Permalink
Supervise not running on debian
Jmecherie August 24, 2019 07:45 CET
If you receive error: Error supervise not running
It's because daemontools/svscanboot is not starting from sysvinit inittab.
To start from systemd:
Reply | Permalink
Broken link
Gabriel Torres June 19, 2019 00:31 CET
qmail.org is offline, change:
wget http://www.qmail.org/netqmail-1.06.tar.gz
to
wget https://notes.sagredo.eu/files/qmail/tar/netqmail-1.06.tar.gz
Reply | Permalink
patch of multilog file size limit
Sam Tang April 6, 2018 11:35 CET
Hi,
This is the little multilog patch I would like to share.
By default multilog only support max 16MB log file, for my email server, 16MB only can save 5 hours log, so I made this little patch, and change multilog file limit to 100MB, here how to apply:
and then update log/run file/s, now can assign file size to s104857600 (100MB).
Reply | Permalink
patch of multilog file size limit
Roberto Puzzanghera Sam Tang April 6, 2018 19:55 CET
thank you, Sam.. I'll add it asap
Reply | Permalink
clear service
Ivelin Topalov February 6, 2018 10:17 CET
the creation of clear service is non understandeable and not well described
cat > clear/run <
syntax error near unexpected token `newline'
what must do run to clear ?
no link creation for service clear
Reply | Permalink
clear service
Roberto Puzzanghera Ivelin Topalov February 6, 2018 12:10 CET
thank you, corrected
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But how do you set the PATH so daemontools can run properly?
Dave Martin March 10, 2012 20:04 CET
I tried installing daemontools exactly as outlined above. But qmailctl start fails because it can't find svc, svok, etc. I researched on the web, and it appears that the issue is with daemontools not being found in the PATH. I've tried updating the path in /etc/profile, and in /etc/inittab (when launching svscan). Although ps -ef | grep svscan demonstrates that svscan is running, qmailctl can't seem to find scripts in the /command folder.
(Per your suggestion, I'm trying to do this install on Slackware (version 13.37).)
I also tried running ./rts > rts.out (as mentioned in Dave Sill's book, "Life With Qmail") but it bombs on every line--again complaining 'command not found' one line after the next.
What am I doing wrong?
Thanks in advance for your response.
-Dave Martin
Reply | Permalink
Hi Dave, first of all thanks
roberto puzzanghera Dave Martin March 10, 2012 20:55 CET
Hi Dave, first of all thanks a lot for your support.
You should have this PATH inside the /command/svscanboot script:
qmail should start by means of a line inside /etc/inittab
so, you may want to check that svscanboot was actually launched on boot, or try to run it manually. I prefer to have it in my rc.local
fyi, I have tested everything on a slackware64 13.37
cheers :)
Roberto
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Daemantools with systemd
hifs roberto puzzanghera January 11, 2014 14:38 CET
if your linux using systemd
remove SV:123456:repawn:/command/svscanboot from /etc/inittab
create a file at /lib/systemd/system/daemontools.service
edit as
copy links
reboot ur system
Reply | Permalink
I confirmed the settings you gave, but still not working
Dave Martin roberto puzzanghera March 12, 2012 12:15 CET
qmailctl start continues to return errors on line 17: svok: command not found
However, ps -ef | grep svscan returns the following:
Could there be a permissions issue with the qmail user accounts? Does the qmail group need to be granted permission to in order to run the daemontool utilities?
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It's seems like the
roberto puzzanghera Dave Martin March 12, 2012 13:51 CET
It's seems like the daemontools' installation has failed... can you post please:
anyway feel free to contact me in private using the contact button above
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