Daemons and Services
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What are daemons, services and agents?
Unix daemons and Windows services are system-wide programs running without user interaction; macOS agents are per user programs (cf system-wide daemons) that may or may not run without user interaction. Although the nomenclature differs, their function is similar: for example www or ftp servers are called daemons under Linux and services under Windows. Because they do not interact with the user directly, they close their stdin, stdout, stderr descriptors at start.
With Free Pascal, Lazarus it is possible to write these daemons/services platform-independent via the Lazarus lazdaemon package. To avoid name conflicts with the Delphi components these classes are called 'daemons'.
Install the LazDaemon package
Before you can start, install the LazDaemon package. Either via Components / Configure installed packages or by opening/installing the lpk file directly: lazarus/components/daemon/lazdaemon.lpk. This package installs some new components and menu items in the IDE:
Under File - New: 3 items appear in the dialog, under the heading: "Daemon (service) applications":
Creating your first Service Daemon
After having installed the LazDaemon package, from the File-New Menu, pick "Daemon (service) application)". This will automatically create two units: one for a TDaemon descendant, and one for a TDaemonMapper descendant. This is what the scaffolded units look like:
unit DaemonUnit1;
{$mode objfpc}{$H+}
interface
uses
Classes, SysUtils, DaemonApp;
type
TDaemon1 = class(TDaemon)
private
public
end;
var
Daemon1: TDaemon1;
implementation
procedure RegisterDaemon;
begin
RegisterDaemonClass(TDaemon1)
end;
{$R *.lfm}
initialization
RegisterDaemon;
end.
unit DaemonMapperUnit1;
{$mode objfpc}{$H+}
interface
uses
Classes, SysUtils, DaemonApp;
type
TDaemonMapper1 = class(TDaemonMapper)
private
public
end;
var
DaemonMapper1: TDaemonMapper1;
implementation
procedure RegisterMapper;
begin
RegisterDaemonMapper(TDaemonMapper1)
end;
{$R *.lfm}
initialization
RegisterMapper;
end.
The TDaemon class, which is a TDataModule descendant, does all the work of a specific daemon in its execute method. The TDaemonMapper handles the service registration and contains data structures describing the service. Both classes need to be registered, which, in this code sample, is done in the initialization section of each unit. Note that both units have a form resource file, which gives you convenient access to all the event handlers supported by both classes from within the Lazarus GUI. The main application component for a service-style application is introduced by putting a reference to DaemonApp into the uses secion of each unit. It provides a complete service framework including advanced features like install and uninstall support, and logging.
Populating the DaemonMapper Class
For the moment let's just fill some basic properties to get things going.
For later use, note the WinBindings property, which lets you configure various service properties for use by the Windows Service Manager.
Now ... how about testing what we have achieved so far? Sure, our daemon doesn't have any execute routine so far, but configuring the DaemonMapper provides all required infos for installing and uninstalling the service on the operating system. To test, compile your application, and then you need open a command line window with elevated privileges, because normal users are by default not allowed to install Windows services. Navigate to the directory where you compiled your test application into, and try out the following commands (sc ist the built-in command line tool to control Windows services from the command line):
TestDaemon -install
|
install the daemon |
sc query TestDaemon
|
check the service status, of course, our service doesn't handle any events yet, so any attempt to start it it runs into an error, but note: the service got known by sc, hence it was installed successfully. |
TestDaemon -uninstall
|
remove the daemon, so we can enhance its code for the next try |
sc query TestDaemon
|
check whether the service was indeed uninstalled |
Screenshots taken 2/2022 on a Windows 11 machine.
Writing the Daemon Methods
TDaemons support the following methods:
- Start
- Called when daemon should start. This method must return immediately with True.
- Stop
- Called when daemon should stop. This method must return immediately with True.
- Shutdown
- Called when daemon should be killed. This method must stop the daemon immediately and return with True. This is not triggered under Linux. Linux simply kills the daemon.
- Pause
- Called when daemon should pause. This method must return immediately with True. Under Linux this is not triggered because the kernel stops the whole daemon on STOP and continues it on CONT.
- Continue
- Called when daemon should continue after a pause. This method must return immediately with True. Under Linux this is not triggered.
- Install
- Called when daemon is registered as a Windows service. This method should return True on success.
- Uninstall
- Called when daemon is unregistered as a Windows service. This method should return True on success.
- AfterUnInstall
- Called after daemon was unregistered as a Windows service. This method should return True on success.
- HandleCustomCode
- Called when a special signal was sent to the daemon. This method should return True on success.
(WIP here: sample code)
Service Installation
Windows
You can install the service by executing the process with the Install parameter. Windows service manager will do the rest for you. You can configure the service and its options from the service manager.
See also: ServiceManager
System codepage / UTF-8
A LazDeamon project is working with default, not UTF-8, codepage. The -dDisableUTF8RTL mode has to be activated with Project Options ... -> Compiler Options -> Additions and Overrides -> Use system encoding.
Linux (only for older Debian)
Download, configure, and "Save As" - the sample script located at Web Archive: [1] (The original link is dead for a long time).
- SVC_ALIAS is the long description of your application
- SVC_FILENAME is the actual file name of your compiled service application
- SVC_DIR is the place your you copied the service application
- SVC_SERVICE_SCRIPT is the final name of the service.sh when you "Save As" the customized debian-service.sh script.
Place your script in the /etc/init.d/ folder
start the service by running "sudo service Name_Of_Your_Script start"
Note: sudo has some variations, e.g.:
sudo -s #
sudo -H #
sudo -i #
sudo su #
sudo sh #
In order to auto-run the service at startup you can try update-rc.d or else will need a third party tool that will do this.
Option 1
sudo update-rc.d Name_Of_Your_Script defaults
Option 2
sudo apt-get install chkconfig
sudo chkconfig --add Name_Of_Your_Script
sudo chkconfig --level 2345 Name_Of_Your_Script on
systemd (Fedora, Debian, SLES12)
Presently, linux flavors are trending away from differing daemon launching and into a unified service model.
Fedora and SuSE Enterprise Linux Server 12 use systemd and with that commands to start/stop services are the same as on debian but there are differences on the configuration files.
- From the command prompt sudo gedit
- Copy and Paste
[Unit]
Description=Long description of your application
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart=complete_path_and_file_name -r
RemainAfterExit=yes
TimeoutSec=25
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
- Edit the following values
- Description - Long Description of your service application
- ExecStart - complete-path_and_file_name is the name of your compiled service application with its complete path
- Save As Dialog
- Navigate to /lib/systemd/system/
- Name the file the name_of_your_service.service
See also
- ServiceManager Example for the Free Pascal unit for managing Windows services
- macOS daemons and agents - macOS native using launchd
- Office Automation
- Taming the daemon: PDF by Michaël Van Canneyt
- Useful discussion with small working daemon application
- Docker Containerization - Containerization as a means to create daemons / services easily