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Running RQ Workers under systemd patterns

Running RQ Workers Under systemd

Systemd is process manager that's built into many popular Linux distributions.

To run multiple workers under systemd, you'll first need to create a unit file.

We can name this file rqworker@.service, put this file in /etc/systemd/system directory (location may differ by what distributions you run).

{% highlight ini %} [Unit] Description=RQ Worker Number %i After=network.target

[Service] Type=simple WorkingDirectory=/path/to/working_directory Environment=LANG=en_US.UTF-8 Environment=LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 Environment=LC_LANG=en_US.UTF-8 ExecStart=/path/to/rq worker -c config.py ExecReload=/bin/kill -s HUP $MAINPID ExecStop=/bin/kill -s TERM $MAINPID PrivateTmp=true Restart=always

[Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target {% endhighlight %}

If your unit file is properly installed, you should be able to start workers by invoking systemctl start rqworker@1.service, systemctl start rqworker@2.service from the terminal.

You can also reload all the workers by invoking systemctl reload rqworker@*.

You can read more about systemd and unit files here.