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A Complete Guide to Node.js Process Management with PM2

Ayooluwa Isaiah

Ayooluwa Isaiah on

A Complete Guide to Node.js Process Management with PM2

Process management refers to various activities around the creation, termination, and monitoring of processes. A process manager is a program that ensures that your applications always stay online after being launched.

Process managers can prevent downtime in production by automatically restarting your application after a crash or even after the host machine reboots. They are also useful in development: they auto-restart an app once its source files or dependencies are updated. Process managers also typically provide monitoring tools that access application logs and other key metrics, such as CPU and memory usage.

PM2 is a Node.js process manager that comes with a built-in load balancer. It helps facilitate production deployments and enables you to keep running applications alive indefinitely (even when accidents occur). It also lets you gain insights into your application's runtime performance and resource consumption and scale your application in real-time through its clustering feature.

In this article, we'll examine PM2's most important features and discover how it can help you increase the resilience of your Node.js applications in production.

Getting Started with PM2

PM2 is available as an NPM package, so you can install it through npm or yarn:

bash
$ npm install pm2 # or $ yarn add pm2

After installing PM2, run npx pm2 --version to see the installed version:

bash
$ npx pm2 --version 5.1.2

If you don't want to prefix the pm2 command with npm every time, you can install it globally:

bash
$ npm install -g pm2 # or $ yarn global add pm2

Aside from the main pm2 command, the installation provides some other executables:

  • pm2-dev: a development tool for restarting your application when file changes in the directory are detected (similar to Nodemon).
  • pm2-runtime: designed to be a drop-in replacement for the node binary in Docker containers. It helps keep the running application in the foreground (unlike pm2, which sends it to the background) so that the container keeps running.
  • pm2-docker: an alias for pm2-runtime.

Start Your Node.js App in Development Mode with PM2

It can be quite tedious to restart your application server in development every time you change the source files. Using the pm2-dev binary to start your application can take care of that concern automatically:

bash
$ pm2-dev start app.js =============================================================================== --- PM2 development mode ------------------------------------------------------ Apps started : app Processes started : 1 Watch and Restart : Enabled Ignored folder : node_modules =============================================================================== app-0 | {"level":30,"time":1638512528047,"pid":4575,"hostname":"Kreig","msg":"Server listening at http://127.0.0.1:3000"} [rundev] App app restarted app-0 | {"level":30,"time":1638512535737,"pid":4631,"hostname":"Kreig","msg":"Server listening at http://127.0.0.1:3000"}

At this point, your server will auto-restart each time you create, modify or delete a source file in your project. It also works when you add or remove a dependency with npm or yarn.

Start Your Node.js App in Production Mode with PM2

When deploying an application to production, you can use the pm2 binary to start it in the background. It launches a daemon that monitors your application and keeps it running indefinitely.

bash
$ pm2 start app.js [PM2] Starting /home/ayo/dev/demo/covid-node/app.js in fork_mode (1 instance) [PM2] Done. ┌─────┬────────┬─────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬──────────┬────────┬──────┬───────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┐ id name namespace version mode pid uptime status cpu mem user watching ├─────┼────────┼─────────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────┼────────┼──────┼───────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┤ 0 app default 1.0.0 fork 16573 0s 0 online 0% 19.1mb ayo disabled └─────┴────────┴─────────────┴─────────┴─────────┴──────────┴────────┴──────┴───────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┘

PM2 defaults to the name of the entry file as the app's name, but you can use a more recognizable name through the --name option. This name is what you'll use to reference the application in many pm2 subcommands.

bash
$ pm2 start app.js --name "my app"

Suppose you need to ensure that your application has established connections with other services (such as the database or cache) before being considered "online" by PM2. In that case, you can use the --wait-ready option when starting your application. This causes PM2 to wait for 3 seconds (by default) or for a ready event (process.send('ready')) before the application is considered ready. You can use the --listen-timeout option to change the length of the delay.

bash
$ pm2 start app.js --wait-ready --listen-timeout 5000 # wait for 5 seconds

Monitoring Your Running Applications in PM2

To list your running applications, use the pm2 list command. This prints a table describing the state of all running applications with columns for:

  • the app name and id
  • CPU and memory usage
  • number of restarts ()
  • uptime
  • process id
  • the mode (fork or cluster)

and others.

You can use this table alongside a host monitoring service like AppSignal to give you a complete picture of your application and its host environment:

Host Monitoring in AppSignal
bash
$ pm2 list ┌─────┬───────────┬─────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬──────────┬────────┬──────┬───────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┐ id name namespace version mode pid uptime status cpu mem user watching ├─────┼───────────┼─────────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────┼────────┼──────┼───────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┤ 0 app default 1.0.0 fork 16573 9m 0 online 0% 57.3mb ayo disabled 2 index default 1.0.0 fork 0 0 16 errored 0% 0b ayo disabled 1 server default 0.1.0 fork 17471 71s 0 online 0% 77.5mb ayo disabled └─────┴───────────┴─────────────┴─────────┴─────────┴──────────┴────────┴──────┴───────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┘

If you see only a subset of this information, try enlarging your terminal window. The list subcommand will not display all the columns if your terminal window is too small. You can also sort the output table according to a metric of your choice:

bash
$ pm2 list --sort [name|id|pid|memory|cpu|status|uptime][:asc|desc] # such as $ pm2 list --sort uptime:desc

If you require more information about a particular app beyond what list provides, use the show subcommand and pass the app name to view more detailed application process metadata. Some of the metrics and data presented in the output include the app's:

  • output and error log files
  • heap size and usage
  • event loop latency
  • uptime
  • number of restarts
  • source control metadata

and more.

bash
$ pm2 show server Describing process with id 1 - name server ┌───────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ status online name server namespace default version 0.1.0 restarts 0 uptime 60m script path /home/ayo/dev/demo/analytics-dashboard/server.js script args N/A error log path /home/ayo/.pm2/logs/server-error.log out log path /home/ayo/.pm2/logs/server-out.log pid path /home/ayo/.pm2/pids/server-1.pid interpreter node interpreter args N/A script id 1 exec cwd /home/ayo/dev/demo/analytics-dashboard exec mode fork_mode node.js version 17.0.0 node env N/A watch & reload unstable restarts 0 created at 2021-12-03T08:33:01.489Z └───────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ . . .

Another way to keep tabs on your running applications is through the built-in terminal dashboard (accessed through the monit subcommand). This allows you to view live data on resource usage and logs for each of your applications.

bash
$ pm2 monit
Monitoring running apps with PM2

Restarting Your Node.js Application with PM2

PM2 allows you to configure several different strategies for how your Node.js application should restart. By default, it restarts your application if it exits or crashes to minimize the impact to your customers in production while the source of the crash is investigated. The restart subcommand is also available for manually restarting your application at any time.

bash
$ pm2 restart app

To ensure a graceful shutdown, make sure you intercept the SIGINT signal to stop all new requests and finish up existing ones before allowing your program to exit.

bash
process.on('SIGINT', function() { gracefulShutdown((err) => { process.exit(err ? 1 : 0) }); })

You can use the --kill-timeout option to ensure that a graceful shutdown does not take too long:

bash
$ pm2 restart app --kill-timeout 5000 # set a 5 second limit

Auto Restart Based on Memory Usage

The --max-memory-restart option is available to restart an app when it reaches a certain memory threshold. This can help prevent a Node.js heap out of memory error. You can specify the memory limit in kilobytes (K), Megabytes (M), or Gigabytes (G).

bash
$ pm2 start app.js --max-memory-restart 1G

Auto Restart Based on Cron Schedule

PM2 also offers a restart strategy based on the Cron syntax. This allows you to schedule a restart at a specific time each day / on certain days of the week / a set time interval (such as every 48 hours).

bash
# Restart at 12:00 pm every day $ pm2 start app.js --cron-restart="0 12 * * *"

Auto Restart on File Change

Remember how pm2-dev auto-restarts your application when you make changes to a file? You can configure the pm2 command to act in a similar manner through the --watch subcommand. In the table outputted by pm2 list, look at the watching column to observe the watch status of an application.

bash
$ pm2 start app.js --watch

Auto Restart after a Delay

You can configure the --restart-delay option to set a delay for automatic restarts. The delay should be supplied in milliseconds.

bash
$ pm2 start app.js --restart-delay=5000 # 5s delay

Ignore Some Exit Codes When Auto Restarting

PM2 auto-restarts your app when the process exits, but it does not take the exit code into account by default, so it restarts regardless of whether the app exits cleanly or crashes. If this behavior is not desired, you can use the --stop-exit-codes option to set exit codes that should not prompt PM2 to auto-restart. For example, you can ensure PM2 does not auto-restart on a clean exit with the following command:

bash
$ pm2 start app.js --stop-exit-codes 0

Restarting Processes after a System Reboot

The previous section covered a variety of ways to restart your application after it is launched. However, none of the strategies there will keep your application up if your server reboots. Notably, PM2 ships with a startup feature that can help solve this problem. You can combine this with a good uptime monitoring service like AppSignal's to guarantee that your application comes back online quickly, even if an accident happens.

You'll need to generate a startup script for your server's init system to execute on system boot and launch the PM2 process, which will subsequently start the configured application processes immediately. You can allow PM2 to autodetect your startup script or pass the init system used by your operating system, which could be systemd, upstart, launchd, rcd, or systemv.

bash
$ pm2 startup # autodetect init system # or $ pm2 startup systemd # generate script for systemd

You should receive the following output:

bash
[PM2] Init System found: systemd ----------------------------------------------------------- PM2 detected systemd but you precised systemd Please verify that your choice is indeed your init system If you arent sure, just run : pm2 startup ----------------------------------------------------------- [PM2] To setup the Startup Script, copy/paste the following command: sudo env PATH=$PATH:/usr/bin /usr/local/lib/node_modules/pm2/bin/pm2 startup systemd -u ayo --hp /home/ayo

You'll need to copy and paste the generated command into the terminal, and then run it as the root:

bash
$ sudo env PATH=$PATH:/usr/bin /usr/local/lib/node_modules/pm2/bin/pm2 startup <distribution> -u <user> --hp <home-path>

If everything goes well, you'll see the following output, indicating that PM2 is configured to start at boot.

bash
[PM2] Init System found: systemd . . . [PM2] [v] Command successfully executed. +---------------------------------------+ [PM2] Freeze a process list on reboot via: $ pm2 save [PM2] Remove init script via: $ pm2 unstartup systemd

At this point, you can run pm2 save to save your process list. This saves the processes currently managed by PM2 to disk so they're accessible to the daemon on system boot.

bash
$ pm2 save [PM2] Saving current process list... [PM2] Successfully saved in /home/<user>/.pm2/dump.pm2

Go ahead and restart your computer or server. Once it boots back up, run pm2 list to see if all the processes are restored. If PM2 doesn't restore them automatically, you can manually relaunch them with the resurrect subcommand. You then won't need to start each process individually.

bash
$ pm2 resurrect [PM2] Resurrecting [PM2] Restoring processes located in /home/<user>/.pm2/dump.pm2

At any point in the future, you can run pm2 save again to update the list of processes that should be restored on boot or when using the resurrect subcommand.

Clustering with PM2

Clustering in Node.js refers to creating child processes that run simultaneously and share the same port in an application. This technique makes it possible to horizontally scale a Node.js application on a single machine, taking advantage of the processing capabilities offered by multi-core systems (since an instance of a Node.js app only runs on a single thread).

The standard Node.js library provides a cluster module to set up clustering in Node.js applications. In a nutshell, it creates child processes (workers) and distributes incoming connections across the simultaneously running worker processes. You'll need to modify your source code to spawn and manage the workers and set up how you'd like to distribute incoming connections amongst them.

PM2 also provides a cluster mode that uses the native cluster module under the hood. However, it does not require any modifications to the application's source code. Instead, all you need to do to start a Node.js program in cluster mode is to supply the -i option to the start subcommand, as follows:

bash
$ pm2 start app.js -i 0 ┌────┬────────────────────┬──────────┬──────┬───────────┬──────────┬──────────┐ id name mode status cpu memory ├────┼────────────────────┼──────────┼──────┼───────────┼──────────┼──────────┤ 0 app cluster 0 online 0% 49.0mb 1 app cluster 0 online 0% 46.8mb 2 app cluster 0 online 0% 44.8mb 3 app cluster 0 online 0% 42.2mb └────┴────────────────────┴──────────┴──────┴───────────┴──────────┴──────────┘

The -i or instances option above allows you to specify the number of workers (child processes) that PM2 should launch. You can set 0 or max to specify that PM2 should spawn as many workers as the number of available CPU cores (as above). Alternatively, you can set the exact number of workers to be greater than the number of available CPU cores, if desired. If you want to add additional worker processes on the fly, use the scale subcommand as shown below:

bash
$ pm2 scale <app_name> +4 # add 4 additional workers in realtime

Once your application launches in cluster mode, incoming requests to the server will be automatically load-balanced across all the worker processes, which can significantly improve throughput. This feature also enables you to restart your app in production (using pm2 restart) without suffering any downtime since PM2 waits for the new workers to become operational before it kills the old ones.

PM2's clustering feature works best when your application is completely stateless. You won't need any code modifications to scale on the same server or even across multiple servers if your app doesn't maintain any state in individual processes. If your application isn't stateless, you'll likely get better results directly using the native cluster module.

Log Management in PM2

Log management is quite straightforward in PM2. The logs for all your running applications are placed in the ~/.pm2/logs directory, and they can be displayed with the logs subcommand. All log entries are prefixed with the application's name to ensure easy identification.

bash
$ pm2 logs # display all logs in realtime $ pm2 logs <app_name> # display only a specific app's logs

You can also clear log data with the flush subcommand:

bash
$ pm2 flush # clear all log data $ pm2 flush <app_name> # flush log data for a specific app

To enable log rotation, install the following module:

bash
$ pm2 install pm2-logrotate

Wrap Up and Next Steps: Dive Further into PM2

I hope this article has helped to crystallize the importance of process management in Node.js applications and how to leverage PM2's robust feature set to manage your application efficiently.

PM2 offers other capabilities that were not covered in this article such as Docker integration, a JavaScript API, and a daemon-less mode, so ensure you check out PM2's documentation to learn more about these advanced features.

Thanks for reading, and happy coding!

P.S. If you liked this post, subscribe to our JavaScript Sorcery list for a monthly deep dive into more magical JavaScript tips and tricks.

P.P.S. If you need an APM for your Node.js app, go and check out the AppSignal APM for Node.js.

Ayooluwa Isaiah

Ayooluwa Isaiah

Ayo is a Software Developer by trade. He enjoys writing about diverse technologies in web development, mainly in Go and JavaScript/TypeScript.

All articles by Ayooluwa Isaiah

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