P(rocess) M(anager) 2
PM2 is a production process manager for Node.js / io.js applications with a built-in load balancer. It allows you to keep applications alive forever, to reload them without downtime and to facilitate common system admin tasks.
Starting an application in production mode is as easy as:
$ pm2 start app.js
PM2 is constantly assailed by more than 400 tests.
Compatible with io.js and Node.js. Compatible with CoffeeScript. Works on Linux (stable) & MacOSx (stable) & Windows (stable).
$ npm install pm2 -g
npm is a builtin CLI when you install Node.js - Installing Node.js or io.js with NVM
$ pm2 start app.js
Your app is now put in background, kept alive forever and monitored.
Or you can use pm2 programmatically:
var pm2 = require('pm2');
pm2.connect(function() {
pm2.start({
script : 'app.js', // Script to be run
exec_mode : 'cluster', // Allow your app to be clustered
instances : 4, // Optional: Scale your app by 4
max_memory_restart : '100M' // Optional: Restart your app if it reaches 100Mo
}, function(err, apps) {
pm2.disconnect();
});
});
# Install latest pm2 version
$ npm install pm2 -g
# Save process list, exit old PM2 & restore all processes
$ pm2 update
PM2 updates are seamless
Once apps are started you can list and manage them easily:
Listing all running processes:
$ pm2 list
Managing your processes is straightforward:
$ pm2 stop <app_name|id|'all'|json_conf>
$ pm2 restart <app_name|id|'all'|json_conf>
$ pm2 delete <app_name|id|'all'|json_conf>
To have more details on a specific process:
$ pm2 describe <id|app_name>
Monitoring all processes launched:
$ pm2 monit
Displaying logs of a specified process or all processes, in real time:
$ pm2 logs
$ pm2 logs <app_name>
$ pm2 logs --raw
$ pm2 logs --lines 5
$ pm2 logs --timestamp "HH:mm:ss"
$ pm2 logs WEB-API --lines 0 --timestamp "HH:mm"
$ pm2 flush # Clear all the logs
When an app is started with the -i option, the cluster mode is enabled.
Supported by all major Node.js frameworks and any Node.js / io.js applications
Warning: If you want to use the embedded load balancer (cluster mode), we recommend the use of node#0.12.0+
, node#0.11.16+
or io.js#1.0.2+
. We do not support node#0.10.*
's cluster module anymore.
With the cluster mode, PM2 enables load balancing between multiple application to use all CPUs available in a server. Each HTTP/TCP/UDP request will be forwarded to one specific process at a time.
$ pm2 start app.js -i max # Enable load-balancer and cluster features
$ pm2 reload all # Reload all apps in 0s manner
$ pm2 scale <app_name> <instance_number> # Increase / Decrease process number
More informations about how PM2 make clustering easy
PM2 can generate and configure a startup script to keep PM2 and your processes alive at every server restart. Execute the startup command only as the user to be running the PM2 daemon.
$ pm2 startup
# auto-detect platform
$ pm2 startup [platform]
# render startup-script for a specific platform, the [platform] could be one of:
# ubuntu|centos|redhat|gentoo|systemd|darwin|amazon
To save a process list just do:
$ pm2 save
PM2 comes with a development tool that allow you to start an application and restart it on file change.
# Start your application in development mode
# = Print the logs and restart on file change
$ pm2-dev run my-app.js
PM2 embeds BabelJS to use next generation Javascript both in development and production.
All features are supported, like watch and restart, cluster mode, reload and related.
To run an ES6/ES7 applications:
# Enable ES6/ES7 live compilation
$ pm2 start app.js --next-gen-js
# Or use the .es extension to automatically enable it
$ pm2 start app.es
If you manage your NodeJS app with PM2, Keymetrics makes it easy to monitor and manage apps accross servers. Feel free to try it:
Discover the monitoring dashboard for PM2
Thanks in advance and we hope that you like PM2!
- Watch & Restart
- JSON application declaration
- Using PM2 in your code
- Deployment workflow
- Startup script generation (SystemV/Ubuntu/Gentoo/AWS)
- Advanced log management (flush, reload, logs)
- GracefullReload
PM2 is made available under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License 3.0 (AGPL 3.0). For other license contact us.