Launch QuestDB with systemd
Use systemd to run QuestDB as a system or user service. This guide will demonstrate an initial configuration which you can use as the basis for your installation scripts. It will also demonstrate how to setup and start a QuestDB systemd service.
Prerequisites
The prerequisites for deploying QuestDB with systemd are:
- A Unix machine supporting systemd
Initial system configuration
The following commands inform a basis for your systemd service. Prior to running systemd, you will require some directory structure and a binary for QuestDB. Depending on your specific needs and operational preferences, your commands may differ. The goal is to give you a helpful starting point for the example service. The example presumes that you have used a privileged user to create a user with appropriately scoped permissions.
#!/bin/bash
# Download and install the JDK
curl -s https://download.oracle.com/java/17/latest/jdk-17_linux-x64_bin.tar.gz -o jdk.tar.gz
mkdir -p ~/jdk
tar -xzf jdk.tar.gz -C ~/jdk --strip-components=1
export JAVA_HOME=~/jdk
export PATH=$JAVA_HOME/bin:$PATH
# Download and set up QuestDB
curl -s https://dl.questdb.io/snapshots/questdb-latest-no-jre-bin.tar.gz -o questdb.tar.gz
mkdir -p ~/questdb/binary
tar -xzf questdb.tar.gz -C ~/questdb/binary --strip-components 1
mv ~/questdb/binary/questdb.jar ~/bin/
Using a QuestDB server.conf
Your QuestDB configuration is done in a server.conf
file. The server.conf
file is populated with safe defaults on first startup if it does not exist. It
is common for user's of QuestDB to stick with the default configuration.
However, should you choose to update your own and serve it via a scripted method
or similar, you may do so.
Read more about the available options in our Configuration reference page.
Example questdb.service
Create a new file called questdb.service
:
touch questdb.service
The example below is a recommended starting point. Note the default QuestDB
service configuration and system paths in line with the above example. Next,
open the questdb.service
file and add the following:
[Unit]
Description=QuestDB
Documentation=https://www.questdb.io/docs/
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
Restart=always
RestartSec=2
# Adjust java path to match requirements of a given distro
ExecStart=/home/[USER_NAME]/jdk/bin/java \
--add-exports java.base/jdk.internal.math=io.questdb \
-p /home/[USER_NAME]/bin/questdb.jar \
-m io.questdb/io.questdb.ServerMain \
-DQuestDB-Runtime-66535 \
-ea -Dnoebug \
-XX:+UnlockExperimentalVMOptions \
-XX:+AlwaysPreTouch \
-XX:+UseParallelOldGC \
-d /home/[USER_NAME]/var/lib/questdb
ExecReload=/bin/kill -s HUP $MAINPID
# Prevent writes to /usr, /boot, and /etc
ProtectSystem=full
StandardError=syslog
SyslogIdentifier=questdb
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Next, move your questdb.service
file into your user's systemd
config:
mv questdb.service ~/.config/systemd/user/questdb.service
Enable the service:
systemctl --user enable questdb.service
Start the service:
systemctl --user start questdb
Check out the service status:
systemctl --user status questdb.service
Your QuestDB instance should now be accessible at localhost, with services available at the following default ports:
- Web console & REST API is available on port
9000
- PostgreSQL wire protocol available on
8812
- InfluxDB line protocol
9009
(TCP and UDP) - Health monitoring & Prometheus
/metrics
9003
User vs. System
As an operator, you can decide whether to run systemd as the "system" from root
permissions, or a user with its own privileges. At the system level, root is
required to make changes to the systemctl
application. Services created this
way will start and stop when the system is restarted.
Unlike at the system level, user services will start & stop as the user session
is activated or de-activated. You also do not need to apply sudo
to make
changes to the services.
Consistent with the examples on this page, we recommend scoped users.