Just use ā-Dā to have it detach from the tty. Or use the systemd/upstart scripts. Or use supervisord.
> On 19 Aug 2017, at 10:43, Sam Elamin <[email protected]> wrote: > > We were using simple screens to do this > > And now migrating to celery > > So run the scheduler on a screen And if your ssh breaks you should still be > ok > > > Regards > Sam > On Sat, 19 Aug 2017 at 04:46, Russell Pierce <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> nohup works, but when I was starting out with Airflow I preferred tmux >> (it's like screen). That keeps the program running if I lose the connection >> and allows me to reattach later. >> >> Best, >> Russell >> >> On Aug 18, 2017 3:23 PM, "manish ranjan" <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Hi All, >>> >>> We are running a single instance of airflow on ec2 Ubuntu. However, I >> feel >>> that the moment my ssh connection breaks, airflow stops functioning. Is >>> there a known way to keep it running. I am aware of *nohup*, but I was >>> thinking the solution should be cleaner than that. >>> >>> ~Manish >>> >>
