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README | ||
airflow-flower.conf | ||
airflow-scheduler.conf | ||
airflow-webserver.conf | ||
airflow-worker.conf |
README
The upstart files in this directory are tested on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS based systems running in VPC on AWS. Copy *.conf files to /etc/init. You can then start airflow services by using initctl start <service>. Where <service> is airflow-worker, airflow-webserver, airflow-scheduler, etc. Upstart automatically starts all airflow services for which you have a corresponding *.conf file in /etc/init upon system boot. If service process dies, upstart will automatically re-spawn it (until it hits re-spawn limit set in a *.conf file) You may have to adjust `start on` & `stop on` stanzas to make it work on other upstart systems. Some of the possible options are listed below # This should work on most Linux distributions that support upstart start on started network-services # This is for Ubuntu based systems which lack generic network-services job # Wait for a non-loopback interface before starting airflow services start on (local-filesystems and net-device-up IFACE!=lo) # This should work on Ubuntu 11.10 based systems # Start after all network interfaces are up start on static-network-up # If nothing else works, use this start on runlevel [2345] It is assumed that airflow will run under `airflow:airflow`. Change `setuid` and `setgid` in *.conf files if you use other user/group You can use `initctl` to manually start, stop, view status of the airflow process. For example `initctl status airflow-webserver`