Facron 0.9 released

Usually, every Thursday I publish another post in my “Knowing your system” saga, but this week I was busy working on facron. I plan to publish the part three on next Monday, it will be about source-based GNU/Linux distributions.

What’s in this release?

Since last time I wrote about it, a few things have changed: the code is more robust and much more cleaner, and several improvements have been made:

  • You’re now able to pass arguments containing spaces if you surround them with quotes or double quotes in the configuration
    file.
  • The fanotify flags handling have slightly changed with a new separator, the comma. If you specify
    “FAN_MODIFY|FAN_CLOSE_WRITE,FAN_OPEN” the event caught will be: either FAN_MODIFY AND FAN_CLOSE_WRITE, or FAN_OPEN.
  • $@ is now the dirname of the file, $# the basename ($$ is still the full path)
  • A manual is now provided
  • A systemd service is now provided (supporting the reload action to reload the configuration)
  • You can now pass the --background argument to facron to launch it in background on non-systemd systems.

How do I get it?

The release tarball is available there: https://github.com/Keruspe/facron/downloads.

You must have fanotify included in your kernel (most recent systems should have it by default).

Here are the steps you need to run in order to get it up and running:

wget https://github.com/downloads/Keruspe/facron/facron-0.9.tar.xz
tar xf facron-0.9.tar.xz
cd facron-0.9
./configure --sysconfdir=/etc --with-systemdsystemunitdir=/usr/lib/systemd/system
make
sudo make install

Then just create your configuration file as I said in the previous post or following the manual instructions (man facron).

When everything is ready, you just have to run

sudo systemctl start facron.service

Or for non-systemd systems

sudo facron --background

If you edit the configuration file, you can reload it without restarting the daemon by running

sudo systemctl reload facron.service

Or for non-systemd systems

sudo kill -USR1 $(pidof facron)

I hope you’ll enjoy it. Feel free to propose new features and/or to contribute!

Blog

À lire également

Manage your WordPress identities with Keycloak

Managing logins to your website can be a complex task. Fortunately, tools like Keycloak, an open-source Identity and Access Management (IAM) solution, can make it much easier to handle authentication and authorization for your application.
Engineering

Clever Cloud launches its first certification: “Cloud Concepts 101”

Clever Cloud, a leading European provider of Platform as a Service (PaaS) solutions, announces the launch of its first official certification, Cloud Concepts 101, designed to help developers master the fundamentals of cloud computing and the Clever Cloud platform.
Company

ACCES 2025: A Day Dedicated to Showcasing Clever Cloud Innovations at the Heart of FOST

Take part in ACCES – Amazing Clever Cloud Enterprise Summit, at FOST Paris.
Company Event