unit/tools
Alejandro Colomar 2f46870a3f Tools: setup-unit: added restart command.
It restarts all running unitd instances.  This is useful when
recompiling unitd often, so that the latest build is running, without
having to manually kill unitd instances and re-run with the same exact
command line every time.

Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2023-06-27 17:45:49 +02:00
..
README.md Tools: unitc edit mode for interactive configuration. 2023-06-07 14:45:35 +01:00
setup-unit Tools: setup-unit: added restart command. 2023-06-27 17:45:49 +02:00
unitc Tools: unitc edit mode for interactive configuration. 2023-06-07 14:45:35 +01:00

Unit Tools

This directory contains useful tools for installing, configuring, and managing NGINX Unit. They may not be part of official packages and should be considered experimental.


setup-unit

A script that simplifies installing and configuring an NGINX Unit server for first-time users

  • setup-unit repo-config configures your package manager with the NGINX Unit repository for later installation.
  • setup-unit welcome creates an initial configuration to serve a welcome web page with NGINX Unit.

unitc

A curl wrapper for managing NGINX Unit configuration

USAGE: unitc [options] URI

  • URI specifies the target in Unit's control API, e.g. /config .
  • Configuration data is read from stdin.
  • jq is used to prettify JSON output, if available.
Options
filename … Read configuration data consequently from the specified files instead of stdin.
HTTP method It is usually not required to specify a HTTP method. GET is used to read the configuration. PUT is used when making configuration changes unless a specific method is provided.
edit Opens URI in the default editor for interactive configuration. The jq tool is required for this option.
INSERT A virtual HTTP method that prepends data when the URI specifies an existing array. The jq tool is required for this option.
-q | --quiet No output to stdout.

Options are case insensitive and can appear in any order. For example, a redundant part of the configuration can be identified by its URI, and followed by delete in a subsequent command.

Local Configuration

For local instances of Unit, the control socket is automatically detected. The error log is monitored; when changes occur, new log entries are shown.

Options
-l | --nolog Do not monitor the error log after configuration changes.

Examples

unitc /config
unitc /control/applications/my_app/restart
unitc /config < unitconf.json
echo '{"*:8080": {"pass": "routes"}}' | unitc /config/listeners
unitc /config/applications/my_app DELETE
unitc /certificates/bundle cert.pem key.pem

Remote Configuration

For remote instances of NGINX Unit, the control socket on the remote host can be set with the $UNIT_CTRL environment variable. The remote control socket can be accessed over TCP or SSH, depending on the type of control socket:

  • ssh://[user@]remote_host[:ssh_port]/path/to/control.socket
  • http://remote_host:unit_control_port

Note: SSH is recommended for remote confguration. Consider the security implications of managing remote configuration over plaintext HTTP.

Options
ssh://… Specify the remote Unix control socket on the command line.
http://…URI For remote TCP control sockets, the URI may include the protocol, hostname, and port.

Examples

unitc http://192.168.0.1:8080/status
UNIT_CTRL=http://192.168.0.1:8080 unitc /status

export UNIT_CTRL=ssh://root@unithost/var/run/control.unit.sock
unitc /config/routes
cat catchall_route.json | unitc POST /config/routes
echo '{"match":{"uri":"/wp-admin/*"},"action":{"return":403}}' | unitc INSERT /config/routes