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Aside from the provided pm2 instructions. You can also use systemd to enable and run Uptime-Kuma at system startup more easily. |
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```ini |
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[Unit] |
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Description=Uptime-Kuma - A free and open source uptime monitoring solution |
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Documentation=https://github.com/louislam/uptime-kuma |
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After=network.target |
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[Service] |
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Type=simple |
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User=uptime |
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WorkingDirectory=/home/uptime/uptime-kuma |
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ExecStart=/usr/bin/npm run start-server |
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Restart=on-failure |
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[Install] |
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WantedBy=multi-user.target |
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``` |
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Note: This unit file assumes that you are running the software as a separate 'uptime' user. If you have node/npm installed in a different path, you will need to alter the ExecStart line to match this. |
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This unit file may be installed to /etc/systemd/system/uptime-kuma.service (Or whatever service name you'd prefer) |
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Once installed, issue the following commands to reload systemd unit files, enable it to start on boot, and start it immediately: |
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```sh |
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systemctl daemon-reload |
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systemctl enable --now uptime-kuma |
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``` |
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