Introduction

AnyCable brings performance, stability, and scalability to WebSockets in Ruby/Rails. For some reason, it lacks only one thing – deployment documentation.

We primary use AWS as an infrastructure solution and happy with it. Capistrano gives us power tool to run deploy scripts while AWS allows scaling fast and easy (yes, we don't need Docker :)). Every day we manage Unicorn, Puma, Sidekiq with custom Capistrano recipes and have no problem with it. Everything works smooth and seems right. With AnyCable you cannot use Capistrano so easy because AnyCable cannot be daemonized out of the box. I will run ahead and say that this was a starting point for a solid, unified deploy solution.

AnyCable meets systemd

After some considerations, I understood that Unicorn or Sidekiq or Puma are just the same system processes as Nginx or PG and they should be controlled by the system. You should facepalm me now :) What is used in modern Linux distros to manage services? Of course, it is systemd . So why not to use it to manage AnyCable?

First of all, let's create a new service for anycable .

# /etc/systemd/system/your-project-anycable.service [Unit] Description=anycable for your-project After=syslog.target network.target [Service] Type=simple Environment=RAILS_ENV=staging WorkingDirectory=/path-to-your-project/current/ ExecStart=/bin/bash -lc 'bundle exec anycable' #additional arguments can be added here ExecStop=/bin/kill -TERM $MAINPID User=www Group=www UMask=0002 MemoryHigh=2G MemoryMax=3G MemoryAccounting=true RestartSec=1 Restart=on-failure [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target

I pretty sure 3 gigabytes will be enough for ruby process :) After adding new service don't forget to reload systemd .

systemctl daemon-reload

Now you can control your AnyCable instance:

sudo systemctl stop|start|restart your-project-anycable

And don't forget to enable AnyCable on boot:

systemctl enable your-project-anycable

Same approach should be applied to AnyCable-Go. Add new service, reload systemd , enable it on boot.

# /etc/systemd/system/your-anycable-go.service [Unit] Description=anycable-go for your-project After=syslog.target network.target [Service] Type=simple WorkingDirectory=/srv/www/go ExecStart=/srv/www/go/bin/anycable-go -port 3334 --ssl_cert=/path/to/your/certificate.pem --ssl_key=/path/to/your/privkey.pem ExecStop=/bin/kill -TERM $MAINPID UMask=0002 RestartSec=1 Restart=on-failure [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target

The last is Capistrano, let's create a new recipe and add it to deploy scenario.

# config/deploy/recipes/anycable.rb # frozen_string_literal: true namespace :anycable do task :stop do on roles(:sidekiq) do execute :sudo, :systemctl, :stop, fetch(:anycable_systemctl_service_name) end end task :start do on roles(:sidekiq) do execute :sudo, :systemctl, :start, fetch(:anycable_systemctl_service_name) end end task :restart do on roles(:sidekiq) do execute :sudo, :systemctl, :restart, fetch(:anycable_systemctl_service_name) end end end

# config/deploy/production.rb ... set :anycable_systemctl_service_name, 'your-project-anycable' after 'deploy:publishing', 'anycable:restart' ...

In conclusion

Why you should use systemd to manage Ruby service and what services can be managed?

As I already said AnyCable here is just an example and we already migrated Unicorn and Sidekiq to systemd too. With systemd your application gets: