Running as a service
How to install and start SonarQube Server as a service in case of a ZIP installation. The operation depends on your operating system.
On Windows
Installing or uninstalling SonarQube as a service
> <sonarqubeHome>\bin\windows-x86-64\SonarService.bat install
> <sonarqubeHome>\bin\windows-x86-64\SonarService.bat uninstallStarting the service
> <sonarqubeHome>\bin\windows-x86-64\SonarService.bat startStopping the service
> <sonarqubeHome>\bin\windows-x86-64\SonarService.bat stopChecking the service status
To check if the SonarQube service is running:
> <sonarqubeHome>\bin\windows-x86-64\SonarService.bat statusOn Linux with systemd
On a Unix system using systemd, you can install SonarQube as a service. You cannot run SonarQube as root in Unix systems. Ideally, you will have created a new account dedicated to the purpose of running SonarQube. Let’s suppose:
The user used to start the service is
sonarqubeThe group used to start the service is
sonarqubeThe Java Virtual Machine is installed in
/opt/java/SonarQube has been unzipped into
/opt/sonarqube/
Then create the file /etc/systemd/system/sonarqube.service based on the following:
[Unit]
Description=SonarQube service
After=syslog.target network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=sonarqube
Group=sonarqube
PermissionsStartOnly=true
ExecStart=/bin/nohup /opt/java/bin/java -Xms32m -Xmx32m -Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true -jar /opt/sonarqube/lib/sonar-application-25.1.0.102122.jar
StandardOutput=journal
LimitNOFILE=131072
LimitNPROC=8192
TimeoutStartSec=5
Restart=always
SuccessExitStatus=143
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.targetOnce your sonarqube.service file is created and properly configured, run:
sudo systemctl enable sonarqube.service
sudo systemctl start sonarqube.serviceOn Linux with initd
The following has been tested on Ubuntu 20.04 and CentOS 6.2.
You cannot run SonarQube as root in *nix systems. Ideally, you will have created a new account dedicated to the purpose of running SonarQube. Let’s suppose the user used to start the service is sonarqube. Then create the file/etc/init.d/sonar based on the following:
#!/bin/sh
#
# rc file for SonarQube
#
# chkconfig: 345 96 10
# description: SonarQube system (www.sonarsource.org)
#
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: sonar
# Required-Start: $network
# Required-Stop: $network
# Default-Start: 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 2 6
# Short-Description: SonarQube system (www.sonarsource.org)
# Description: SonarQube system (www.sonarsource.org)
### END INIT INFO
su sonarqube -c "/usr/bin/sonar $*"Register SonarQube at boot time (RedHat, CentOS, 64 bit):
sudo ln -s <sonarqubeHome>/bin/linux-x86-64/sonar.sh /usr/bin/sonar
sudo chmod 755 /etc/init.d/sonar
sudo chkconfig --add sonarRegister SonarQube at boot time (Ubuntu, 64 bit):
sudo ln -s <sonarqubeHome>/bin/linux-x86-64/sonar.sh /usr/bin/sonar
sudo chmod 755 /etc/init.d/sonar
sudo update-rc.d sonar defaultsOnce registration is done, run:
sudo service sonar startLast updated
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