herd
and shepherd
¶The daemon that runs in the background and is responsible for
controlling the services is shepherd
, while the user interface
tool is called herd
: it’s the command that allows you to
actually herd your daemons1. To perform an
action, like stopping a service or calling an action of a service, you
use the herd program. It will communicate with shepherd over a Unix
Domain Socket.
Thus, you start shepherd
once, and then always use herd whenever you want
to do something service-related. Since herd passes its current
working directory to shepherd
, you can pass relative file names without
trouble. Both shepherd
and herd understand the standard arguments
--help
, --version
and --usage
.
In the past, when the
GNU Shepherd was known as GNU dmd, the herd
command
was called deco
, for DaEmon COntroller.