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ece84f2c45
* Labeled a lot more code blocks with the appropriate type * Fixed a couple of minor typos (missing/extraneous commas) Signed-off-by: Sumner Evans <me@sumnerevans.com>
37 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
37 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
### Using synctl with workers
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If you want to use `synctl` to manage your synapse processes, you will need to
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create an an additional configuration file for the main synapse process. That
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configuration should look like this:
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```yaml
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worker_app: synapse.app.homeserver
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```
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Additionally, each worker app must be configured with the name of a "pid file",
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to which it will write its process ID when it starts. For example, for a
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synchrotron, you might write:
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```yaml
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worker_pid_file: /home/matrix/synapse/worker1.pid
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```
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Finally, to actually run your worker-based synapse, you must pass synctl the `-a`
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commandline option to tell it to operate on all the worker configurations found
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in the given directory, e.g.:
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```sh
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synctl -a $CONFIG/workers start
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```
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Currently one should always restart all workers when restarting or upgrading
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synapse, unless you explicitly know it's safe not to. For instance, restarting
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synapse without restarting all the synchrotrons may result in broken typing
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notifications.
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To manipulate a specific worker, you pass the -w option to synctl:
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```sh
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synctl -w $CONFIG/workers/worker1.yaml restart
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```
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