pm2-installer
is designed to automate installation of pm2 as a service, particularly on Windows, even in environments without Internet access.
Unfortunately, PM2 has no built-in startup support for Windows. PM2's documentation recommends using either pm2-windows-service
or pm2-windows-startup
. However, both of these projects have some real drawbacks.
pm2-windows-startup
adds an entry to the registry to start pm2 after user login. Because it does not create a service, PM2 will not be running until a user has logged into the user interface, and will halt when they log out. It has not been updated since 2015.
pm2-windows-service
uses node-windows
to create a service that runs pm2. This is a much better approach, but it hasn't been maintained since 2018, has outdated dependencies that cause crashes on setup, and currently fails to run properly on Node 14. It also runs the service as the the Local System
user instead of Local Service
.
This project creates its own Windows Service using the current version of node-windows
and a series of PowerShell scripts inspired by this excellent gist by @maxfierke & @mauron85.
When running on Windows, pm2-installer
will:
- Configure
npm
to keep its global files inC:\ProgramData\npm
, instead of keeping them in the current user's%APPDATA%
- Install
pm2
globally, using an offline cache if necessary - Create the
C:\ProgramData\pm2
directory and set thePM2_HOME
environmental variable at the machine level - Set permissions both the new
npm
andpm2
folders so that the Local Service user may access them - Leverage
node-windows
to install a new Windows service - Use PowerShell to configure the service to run as the Local Service user (due to node-windows#89)
- Confirm the service is running properly
- Install the
pm2-logrotate
module so that log files don't fill up the disk
After that, pm2
will be running in the background the Local Service
user. It will persist across reboots and continue running regardless of which user is logged in. To add your app, run pm2 start app.js
from an admin command line interface. Make sure to run pm2 save
to serialize the process list.
Download the latest version here.
Copy the entire pm2-installer
directory onto the target machine, then run:
npm run setup
On Windows, the setup
script assumes you have already configured npm
to use prefix
and cache
directories in a location accessible to the Local Service
user. If not, it will issue a warning and ask if you're sure you'd like to proceed.
To set up npm
automatically, run configure
first:
npm run configure
npm run setup
That's it.
pm2-installer
is also designed to function without an internet connection. It does this by creating a cache on an internet-connected build machine, then installing from that cache when run on the offline deployment machine.
On an internet-connected build machine running the same OS as the deployment target, run the following:
npm run bundle
This will populate the cache in the project's directory with the resources required to install offline. Transfer the entire pm2-installer
directory onto the deployment target, then run:
npm run setup
pm2-installer
will check if it can contact the npm registry and install online if possible, or use the offline cache if not.
There are a couple additional challenges when installing on a fresh Windows machine. The npm
global directory is not accessible to other users by default, which means the Local Service
user will not be able to locate the pm2
executable. Additionally, if the machine's PowerShell execution policy is Undefined
or Restricted
, invoking pm2
in PowerShell will fail- even though the setup script unblocks pm2.ps1
.
pm2-installer
includes two additional scripts to automatically fix the above issues. Invoking npm run configure
will create the C:\ProgramData\npm\
, and set npm
to use prefix
and cache
locations in that directory. Running npm run configure-policy
checks the machine's PowerShell execution policy and if it is either undefined
or Restricted
, updates it to RemoteSigned
.
Open an elevated terminal (e.g. right click and select "Run as Admin") and run the following commands:
npm run configure
npm run configure-policy
npm run setup
To remove the pm2 service, run:
npm run remove
This will remove the service and completely uninstall pm2.
If you used the configure
script on Windows to configure npm
, you can revert those settings by running:
npm run deconfigure
MIT © Jesse Youngblood