Process Management
New
Introduced in 0.3.14, Enhanced in 0.7.0
ps:inspect <app> # Displays a sanitized version of docker inspect for an app
ps:rebuild [--parallel count] [--all|<app>] # Rebuilds an app from source
ps:report [<app>] [<flag>] # Displays a process report for one or more apps
ps:restart [--parallel count] [--all|<app>] [<process-name>] # Restart an app
ps:restore [<app>] # Start previously running apps e.g. after reboot
ps:scale [--skip-deploy] <app> <proc>=<count> [<proc>=<count>...] # Get/Set how many instances of a given process to run
ps:set <app> <key> <value> # Set or clear a ps property for an app
ps:start [--parallel count] [--all|<app>] # Start an app
ps:stop [--parallel count] [--all|<app>] # Stop an app
Usage
Inspecting app containers
New
Introduced in 0.13.0
A common administrative task to perform is calling docker inspect on the containers that are running for an app. This can be an error-prone task to perform, and may also reveal sensitive environment variables if not done correctly. Dokku provides a wrapper around this command via the ps:inspect command:
This command will gather all the running container IDs for your app and call docker inspect, sanitizing the output data so it can be copy-pasted elsewhere safely.
Rebuilding apps
It may be useful to rebuild an app at will, such as for commands that do not rebuild an app or when skipping a rebuild after setting multiple config values. For these use cases, the ps:rebuild function can be used.
All apps may be rebuilt by using the --all flag.
By default, rebuilding all apps happens serially. The parallelism may be controlled by the --parallel flag.
Finally, the number of parallel workers may be automatically set to the number of CPUs available by setting the --parallel flag to -1
A missing linked container will result in failure to boot apps. Services should all be started for apps being rebuilt.
Restarting apps
An app may be restarted using the ps:restart command.
A single process type - such as web or worker - may also be specified. This does not support specifying a given instance of a process type, and only supports restarting all instances of that process type.
All apps may be restarted by using the --all flag. This flag is incompatible with specifying a process type.
By default, restarting all apps happens serially. The parallelism may be controlled by the --parallel flag.
Finally, the number of parallel workers may be automatically set to the number of CPUs available by setting the --parallel flag to -1
A missing linked container will result in failure to boot apps. Services should all be started for apps being rebuilt.
Displaying existing scale properties
Issuing the ps:scale command with no arguments will output the current scaling properties for an app.
Scaling apps
Via CLI
Info
This functionality is disabled if the formation is managed via the formation key of app.json.
Dokku can also manage scaling itself via the ps:scale command. This command can be used to scale multiple process types at the same time.
Multiple process types can be scaled at once:
If desired, the corresponding deploy will be skipped by using the --skip-deploy flag:
Manually managing process scaling
Info
Using a formation key in an app.json file with any quantity specified disables the ability to use ps:scale for scaling. All processes not specified in the app.json will have their process count set to zero.
An app.json file can be committed to the root of the pushed app repository, and must be within the built image artifact in the image's working directory as shown below.
- Buildpacks:
/app/app.json - Dockerfile:
WORKDIR/app.jsonor/app.json(if no working directory specified) - Docker Image:
WORKDIR/app.jsonor/app.json(if no working directory specified)
The formation key should be specified as follows in the app.json file:
Removing the file will result in Dokku respecting the ps:scale command for setting scale values. The values set via the app.json file from a previous deploy will be respected.
The web process
For initial app deploys, Dokku will default to starting a single web process for each app. This process may be defined within the Procfile or as the CMD (for Dockerfile or Docker image deploys). Scaling of the web process - and all other processes - may be managed via ps:scale or the formation key in the app.json file either before or after the initial deploy.
There are also a few other exceptions for the web process.
- Custom checks defined by a
CHECKSfile only apply to thewebprocess type. - By default, the built-in nginx proxy implementation only proxies the
webprocess (others may be handled via a customnginx.conf.sigil). - See the nginx request proxying documentation for more information on how nginx handles proxied requests.
- Only the
webprocess may be bound to an external port.
Changing the Procfile location
When deploying a monorepo, it may be desirable to specify the specific path of the Procfile file to use for a given app. This can be done via the ps:set command. If a value is specified and that file does not exist within the repository, Dokku will continue the build process as if the repository has no Procfile.
The default value may be set by passing an empty value for the option:
The procfile-path property can also be set globally. The global default is Procfile, and the global value is used when no app-specific value is set.
The default value may be set by passing an empty value for the option.
Stopping apps
Deployed apps can be stopped using the ps:stop command. This turns off all running containers for an app, and will result in a 502 Bad Gateway response for the default nginx proxy implementation.
All apps may be stopped by using the --all flag.
By default, stopping all apps happens serially. The parallelism may be controlled by the --parallel flag.
Finally, the number of parallel workers may be automatically set to the number of CPUs available by setting the --parallel flag to -1
Starting apps
All stopped containers can be started using the ps:start command. This is similar to running ps:restart, except no action will be taken if the app containers are running.
All apps may be started by using the --all flag.
By default, starting all apps happens serially. The parallelism may be controlled by the --parallel flag.
Finally, the number of parallel workers may be automatically set to the number of CPUs available by setting the --parallel flag to -1
Restart policies
New
Introduced in 0.7.0, Command Changed in 0.22.0
By default, Dokku will automatically restart containers that exit with a non-zero status up to 10 times via the on-failure Docker restart policy.
Setting the restart policy
Info
A change in the restart policy must be followed by a ps:rebuild call.
You can configure this via the ps:set command:
# always restart an exited container
dokku ps:set node-js-app restart-policy always
# never restart an exited container
dokku ps:set node-js-app restart-policy no
# only restart it on Docker restart if it was not manually stopped
dokku ps:set node-js-app restart-policy unless-stopped
# restart only on non-zero exit status
dokku ps:set node-js-app restart-policy on-failure
# restart only on non-zero exit status up to 20 times
dokku ps:set node-js-app restart-policy on-failure:20
Restart policies have no bearing on server reboot, and Dokku will always attempt to restart your apps at that point unless they were manually stopped.
Dokku also runs dokku-event-listener in the background via the system's init service. This monitors container state, performing the following actions:
- If a web process restarts and it's container IP address changes, the app's proxy configuration will be rebuilt.
- If a process within an app exceeds the restart count, the app will be rebuilt.
Displaying reports for an app
New
Introduced in 0.12.0
You can get a report about the deployed apps using the ps:report command:
=====> node-js-app ps information
Deployed: false
Processes: 0
Ps can scale: true
Ps computed procfile path: Procfile2
Ps global procfile path: Procfile
Ps restart policy: on-failure:10
Ps procfile path: Procfile2
Restore: true
Running: false
=====> python-sample ps information
Deployed: false
Processes: 0
Ps can scale: true
Ps computed procfile path: Procfile
Ps global procfile path: Procfile
Ps restart policy: on-failure:10
Ps procfile path:
Restore: true
Running: false
=====> ruby-sample ps information
Deployed: false
Processes: 0
Ps can scale: true
Ps computed procfile path: Procfile
Ps global procfile path: Procfile
Ps restart policy: on-failure:10
Ps procfile path:
Restore: true
Running: false
You can run the command for a specific app also.
You can pass flags which will output only the value of the specific information you want. For example:
Restoring apps after a server reboot
When a server reboots or Docker is restarted/upgraded, Docker may or may not start old app containers automatically, and may in some cases re-assign container IP addresses. To combat this issue, Dokku uses an init process that triggers dokku ps:restore after the Docker daemon is detected as starting. When triggered, the dokku ps:restore command will serially (one by one) run the following for each:
- Start all linked services.
- Clear generated proxy configuration files.
- Start the app if it has not been manually stopped.
- If the app containers still exist, they will be started and the generated proxy configuration files will be rebuilt.
- If any of the app containers are missing, the entire app will be rebuilt.
During this time, requests may route to the incorrect app if the assigned IPs correspond to those for other apps. While dokku makes all efforts to avoid this, there may be a few minutes where urls may route to the wrong app. To avoid this, either use a custom proxy plugin or wait a few minutes until the restoration process is complete.