Difference between revisions of "Service Restart after Upgrades"

From Run Your Own
Jump to: navigation, search
(Restart service)
(Notes)
Line 15: Line 15:
 
=== Notes ===
 
=== Notes ===
 
* Most things can be restarted without creating havoc, in doubt, RTFM.
 
* Most things can be restarted without creating havoc, in doubt, RTFM.
* <code>systemd<code> related processes are best restarted via <code>systemctl<code> and <code>systemd</code> itself will have been restarted by post-install package manager hooks/scripts. If you want to force restart the daemon, use <code>sudo systemctl daemon-reexec</code>
+
* <code>systemd</code> related processes are best restarted via <code>systemctl</code> and <code>systemd</code> itself will have been restarted by post-install package manager hooks/scripts. If you want to force restart the daemon, use <code>sudo systemctl daemon-reexec</code>
  
  
 
[[Category: System]]
 
[[Category: System]]

Revision as of 12:47, 23 January 2019

After updating some software on a Linux machine, some services making use of this software will be restarted to make use of the new version. But most of the time, no. One way to refresh it all is to reboot, but unless there is a kernel update you should not need to do such thing.

Find software that needs to be restarted

You can do that with lsof and looking for process that have opened files that are now gone. They are still in memory (otherwise said process would be quite unhappy), but they are not the same as they were on disk since the process first opened. That's a sign it has been most likely updated.

sudo lsof | grep lib | grep DEL | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq

Restart service

Well, you know... Once you have your list of processes who could do with some refreshing, their name should easily hint at the service you need to restart :)

sudo service whatever restart

Notes

  • Most things can be restarted without creating havoc, in doubt, RTFM.
  • systemd related processes are best restarted via systemctl and systemd itself will have been restarted by post-install package manager hooks/scripts. If you want to force restart the daemon, use sudo systemctl daemon-reexec