So if I am running Ubuntu and I choose to set up this kind of service do I 
need to install and external monitoring service like Monit found here:
(https://mmonit.com/)

Or will that not work for the mod_wsgi application?

On Monday, April 6, 2015 at 11:46:09 AM UTC-7, Trent Miller wrote:
>
> Alright Awesome,
>
> We are running Ubuntu version 14.04. 
> We installed apache and modwsgi using the instructions for installation 
> into python here:
>
> *https://pypi.python.org/pypi/mod_wsgi 
> <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/mod_wsgi>*
>
> More specifically with the commands:
>
> python setup.py install
>
> pip install mod_wsgi
>
>
> As for your question about my wording "uses mod_wsgi to run an apache 
> server"
> That is most likely a wording mistake demonstrating my inexperience.
>
> On Monday, April 6, 2015 at 11:16:14 AM UTC-7, Jason Garber wrote:
>>
>> Linux is a word that is used to describe hundreds of different operating 
>> systems running on the linux kernel.  Specifically I am looking for 
>> something like Debian, Ubuntu, Redhat, Centos, Fedora, etc..
>>
>> And what version.
>>
>> And how you installed apache and mod_wsgi.
>>
>> From everything I am seeing in your message, you are doing work that 
>> should already be done for you by a decent operating system.
>>
>> Centos, for example, is free, and has fully updated mod_wsgi + apache + 
>> mysql + postgresql + nginx packages available for free, including full 
>> integration with the operating system's start/stop/restart routines.
>>
>> One other thing that is confusing is "uses mod_wsgi to run an apache 
>> server".  Either that was a wording mistake or you are doing some really 
>> out-of-the-box stuff.  mod_wsgi is an apache module that runs within the 
>> apache server.
>>
>> On RHEL/Centos, here is what it looks like (using IUS packages):
>>
>> yum install python33
>> yum install httpd 
>> yum install mod_wsgi
>> ...
>> ... configure your wsgi site in /etc/httpd/conf.d/yoursite.conf ...
>> ...
>> chkconfig httpd on
>> service httpd start
>>
>> Then it will just stay on and always come back on when the server 
>> restarts.
>>
>> Hope this helps a bit.
>>
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>> On Mon, Apr 6, 2015 at 2:08 PM, Trent Miller <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Linux, and are you asking for my version of modwsgi or apache?
>>>
>>> On Sunday, April 5, 2015 at 2:59:50 PM UTC-7, Jason Garber wrote:
>>>>
>>>> What os and version?
>>>> On Apr 5, 2015 5:18 PM, "Trent Miller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> My group and I are running a server that is based upon Django and uses 
>>>>> mod_wsgi to run an Apache server. We will not be working on this project 
>>>>> after it is over, so I am attempting to set up cronjob similar 
>>>>> functionality to check if the apache server has shut down(system restart 
>>>>> or 
>>>>> power failure), and if it has, will restart the server for me. I've found 
>>>>> documentation on how to check if an apache server is down and restart the 
>>>>> server if it is, but our server uses https and thus our start command is 
>>>>> pretty verbose.
>>>>>
>>>>> The command we use to initially start the server is
>>>>>
>>>>> python manage.py runmodwsgi --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8001 --https-port 
>>>>> 8000 --ssl-certificate (certificate Location) --server-name (Domain Name)
>>>>> I asked this question on stack overflow and got some good feedback 
>>>>> that I should use the --setup-only command and a system service manager 
>>>>> to 
>>>>> set up a configuration to restart my server if this happens.  I am pretty 
>>>>> new to Linux and I'm not really sure what the system service manager is 
>>>>> and 
>>>>> how I would prepare one for my server in particular. 
>>>>>
>>>>> The stack overflow post also mentioned I should use the --server-root 
>>>>> command to setup a persistent location for the generated configuration. 
>>>>> Should I use this command in the same command that i am using 
>>>>> --setup-only 
>>>>> or is the --server-root command something I do after the configuration is 
>>>>> generated?
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm pretty new to Linux and using both Mod-wsgi as well as Apache so 
>>>>> any help is greatly appreciated.
>>>>>
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>>
>>

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