Monitoring a Golang application with Supervisor

Elton Minetto - Mar 22 '19 - - Dev Community

Dear reader… If you are reading this post a few years after his publication date you must understand that in 2018 we were very excited about things like micro services, Docker, Kubernetes and related technologies.

So, our first reaction when thinking about “application deployment” is put all this magic together and run our API, or a hand full of micro services, in a complex environment with Kubernetes, Istio, and so on. I’ve ‘Been there, done that’…

But, in moments like these, we can always count on internet wisdom:

XhK8RJv

In this post, I will present a simple solution that I believe will fit for a lot of projects out there: Supervisor. According to the Supervisor’s site:

Supervisor is a client/server system that allows its users to monitor and control a number of processes on UNIX-like operating systems.

The first time I used Supervisor was in 2008, to monitor some queue consumer workers, developed in PHP. This can prove two facts:

  1. I’m getting old;
  2. Supervisor is a battle tested tool.

Let’s jump to the example.

Installation

In this post, I used a Linux box with Ubuntu 18.04, but in the Supervisor’s site, we can find instructions regarding the installation process in other distros.

I executed:

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y supervisor
sudo service supervisor start
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We can use the following command to check the status of Supervisor:

sudo supervisorctl status
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We don’t have any service been monitored, so the command result is empty.

Let’s create an API in Go (version 1.11) to use as our service. I created a main.go with:

main

We can now generate the binary with the command:

sudo go build -o /usr/local/bin/api main.go 
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The next step is to configure Supervisor to manage our API. We need to create a config file in:

sudo vim /etc/supervisor/conf.d/api.conf
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With the content:

[program:api]
directory=/usr/local
command=/usr/local/bin/api
autostart=true
autorestart=true
stderr_logfile=/var/log/api.err
stdout_logfile=/var/log/api.log
environment=CODENATION_ENV=prod
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We need to create a file like this for each process that Supervisor will manage. In this file, we define the name of our process ([program:api]), the command that will be executed (command=/usr/local/bin/api), if Supervisor should restart the service if any kind of error occurs (autorestart=true) and the log destination (stderr_logfile and stdout_logfile). We can configure environment variables that will be used by the process (environment) and other options that can be found in the documentation.

Now we need to tell Supervisor to reload the configuration files, including the one we just created:

ubuntu@7648e3e0ef2b:~ sudo supervisorctl reload
Restarted supervisord
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And let’s check the process status:

root@759cc81a91f0:~ sudo supervisorctl status
api            RUNNING   pid 3032, uptime 0:00:03
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As we can see, the process is alive and running.

Let’s change our API to write some access logs :

main_stdout

To update our service we need to execute:

sudo supervisorctl stop api
sudo go build -o /usr/local/bin/api main.go 
sudo supervisorctl start api
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After a few access, we can see that the logs are been stored in the file /var/log/api.log, as configured in /etc/supervisor/conf.d/api.conf:

cat /var/log/api.log 
2018/11/28 23:22:12 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42282 GET /
2018/11/28 23:22:13 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42284 GET /
2018/11/28 23:22:14 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42286 GET /
2018/11/28 23:22:14 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42288 GET /
2018/11/28 23:22:14 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42290 GET /
2018/11/28 23:22:15 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42292 GET /
2018/11/28 23:22:17 main.go:28: 127.0.0.1:42294 GET /
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As a final test, let’s change our API again, this time to emulate an error:

main_stderr

Updating the service again:

sudo go build -o /usr/local/bin/api main.go
sudo supervisorctl restart api
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Let’s access the error generation URL:

root@759cc81a91f0:~ curl http://localhost:8080/erro
curl: (52) Empty reply from server
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As we can see, the error log was generated in the expected place:

root@759cc81a91f0:~ cat /var/log/api.err 
ERROR 2018/11/28 23:42:29 main.go:29: Something wrong happened
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As Supervisor is monitoring our process, we know that the API is running again, what we can prove with the command:

root@759cc81a91f0:~ supervisorctl status
api          RUNNING   pid 3857, uptime 0:00:22
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With Supervisor you can count on a simple infrastructure to manage your services, at least until the project became more complex and you need to move to something like Kubernetes.

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