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Home/ Questions/Q 4023804
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T10:38:36+00:00 2026-05-20T10:38:36+00:00

I’m asking in both contexts: technically and stylistically. Can my application/daemon keep a pidfile

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I’m asking in both contexts: technically and stylistically.

Can my application/daemon keep a pidfile in /opt/my_app/run/?

Is it very bad to do so?

My need is this: my daemon runs under a specific user, and the implementor must mkdir a new directory in /var/run, chown, and chgrp it to make my daemon run. Seems easier to just keep the pidfile local (to the daemon).

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T10:38:36+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 10:38 am

    I wouldn’t put a pidfile under an application installation directory such as /opt/my_app/whatever. This directory could be mounted read-only, could be shared between machines, could be watched by a daemon that treats any change there as a possible break-in attempt…

    The normal location for pidfiles is /var/run. Most unices will clean this directory on boot; under Ubuntu this is achieved by /var/run an in-memory filesystem (tmpfs).

    If you start your daemon from a script that’s running as root, have it create a subdirectory /var/run/gmooredaemon and chown it to the daemon-running user before suing to the user and starting the daemon.

    On many modern Linux systems, if you start the daemon from a script or launcher that isn’t running as root, you can put the pidfile in /run/user/$UID, which is a per-user equivalent of the traditional /var/run. Note that the root part of the launcher, or a boot script running as root, needs to create the directory (for a human user, the directory is created when the user logs in).

    Otherwise, pick a location under /tmp or /var/tmp, but this introduces additional complexity because the pidfile’s name can’t be uniquely determined if it’s in a world-writable directory.

    In any case, make it easy (command-line option, plus perhaps a compile-time option) for the distributor or administrator to change the pidfile location.

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