| name | self-managing-tool-patterns |
| description | Use when adding a doctor diagnostic command, self-update/upgrade mechanism, cross-platform service installation (systemd and launchd), or post-upgrade verification to a CLI tool.
|
Self-Managing Tool Lifecycle
The Pattern
Problem: Your tool runs as a long-lived service. Users need to check if it's healthy, upgrade it without SSH'ing in, and have it start on boot. You need this to work on both Linux (systemd) and macOS (launchd).
Approach: A doctor command for diagnostics, PEP 610 introspection for install source detection, an upgrade flow that stops-reinstalls-regenerates-restarts-verifies, and cross-platform service management with PATH forwarding.
Pattern proven in production across multiple Python CLI tools and web services.
Key Design Decisions
1. Doctor — structured checklist with colored output
Implement a doctor command that checks prerequisites, versions, service status, and update availability:
def doctor() -> None:
ok_mark = "\033[32m\u2713\033[0m"
fail_mark = "\033[31m\u2717\033[0m"
warn_mark = "\033[33m!\033[0m"
The checklist should cover:
- Python version (3.11+ required)
- External dependencies (docker, git, etc.)
- Tool version + install source + update check
- Settings file existence
- Serve configuration
- TLS certificate status and expiry (if applicable)
- Auth status (if applicable)
- Active sessions/instances
- Platform + service status
The service status check should be platform-aware:
if sys.platform == "darwin":
plist = Path.home() / "Library" / "LaunchAgents" / "com.my-tool.plist"
if plist.exists():
result = subprocess.run(
["launchctl", "print", f"gui/{uid}/com.my-tool"],
capture_output=True, text=True,
)
if result.returncode == 0:
print(f" {ok_mark} Service: launchd agent running")
else:
systemd_user = Path.home() / ".config" / "systemd" / "user" / "my-tool.service"
if systemd_user.exists():
print(f" {ok_mark} Service: systemd user unit installed")
2. PEP 610 install source detection via direct_url.json
Detect how the tool was installed to determine the correct upgrade strategy:
def _get_install_info() -> dict:
"""Detect how the tool was installed using PEP 610 direct_url.json."""
dist = distribution("my-tool")
info["version"] = dist.metadata["Version"]
du_text = dist.read_text("direct_url.json")
if du_text:
du = json.loads(du_text)
if "vcs_info" in du:
info["source"] = "git"
info["commit"] = du["vcs_info"].get("commit_id", "")
info["url"] = du.get("url", "")
elif "dir_info" in du and du["dir_info"].get("editable"):
info["source"] = "editable"
else:
info["source"] = "unknown"
else:
info["source"] = "pypi"
Update checking uses the install source:
def _check_for_update(info) -> tuple[bool, str]:
if info["source"] == "editable":
return False, "editable install — manage updates manually"
if info["source"] == "git":
result = subprocess.run(["git", "ls-remote", info["url"], "HEAD"], ...)
remote_sha = result.stdout.strip().split()[0]
if local_sha == remote_sha:
return False, f"up to date (commit {local_sha[:8]})"
return True, f"update available ({local_sha[:8]} → {remote_sha[:8]})"
if info["source"] == "pypi":
...
3. Upgrade flow: stop > reinstall > regenerate service > restart > verify
The upgrade sequence is strict and ordered:
def upgrade(force=False):
subprocess.run(["launchctl", "bootout", f"gui/{uid}/{label}"])
subprocess.run([uv_path, "tool", "install",
"git+https://...", "--force"])
service_install()
subprocess.run(["launchctl", "bootstrap", f"gui/{uid}", str(plist)])
doctor()
For tools with plugins, include them during reinstall:
specs = _read_plugins()
with_args = []
for spec in specs:
with_args.extend(["--with", spec])
cmd = [uv_path, "tool", "install",
"git+https://github.com/yourorg/your-tool",
"--force", *with_args]
4. Cross-platform service management
Generate platform-specific service files from templates with PATH forwarding:
Linux (systemd user unit):
_SYSTEMD_UNIT_TEMPLATE = """\
[Unit]
Description=my-tool
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart={exec_start}
Restart=on-failure
RestartSec=5s
Environment=PATH={safe_path}
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
"""
macOS (launchd plist):
_LAUNCHD_PLIST_TEMPLATE = """\
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
...
<key>EnvironmentVariables</key>
<dict>
<key>PATH</key>
<string>{safe_path}</string>
</dict>
<key>RunAtLoad</key>
<true/>
<key>KeepAlive</key>
<true/>
"""
The install function captures the current PATH:
def _systemd_install() -> None:
tool_bin = _resolve_tool_bin()
safe_path = os.environ.get("PATH", "/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin")
exec_start = f"{tool_bin} serve"
unit_content = _SYSTEMD_UNIT_TEMPLATE.format(
exec_start=exec_start, safe_path=safe_path)
_SYSTEMD_UNIT_DIR.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
_SYSTEMD_UNIT_PATH.write_text(unit_content)
subprocess.run(["systemctl", "--user", "daemon-reload"], check=True)
subprocess.run(["systemctl", "--user", "enable", "--now", "my-tool"], check=True)
5. Public dispatch API
The service module exposes a platform-dispatching public API:
def service_install():
if _is_darwin(): _launchd_install()
else: _systemd_install()
def service_uninstall():
if _is_darwin(): _launchd_uninstall()
else: _systemd_uninstall()
Template / Starter Code
import json, os, platform, shutil, subprocess, sys
from importlib.metadata import distribution, PackageNotFoundError
from pathlib import Path
PACKAGE_NAME = "my-tool"
def get_install_info() -> dict:
info = {"source": "unknown", "version": "0.0.0", "commit": None, "url": None}
try:
dist = distribution(PACKAGE_NAME)
info["version"] = dist.metadata["Version"]
du_text = dist.read_text("direct_url.json")
if du_text:
du = json.loads(du_text)
if "vcs_info" in du:
info["source"] = "git"
info["commit"] = du["vcs_info"].get("commit_id", "")
info["url"] = du.get("url", "")
elif du.get("dir_info", {}).get("editable"):
info["source"] = "editable"
else:
info["source"] = "pypi"
except PackageNotFoundError:
pass
return info
def doctor():
ok = "\033[32m\u2713\033[0m"
fail = "\033[31m\u2717\033[0m"
warn = "\033[33m!\033[0m"
info = get_install_info()
print(f" {ok} {PACKAGE_NAME} {info['version']} (via {info['source']})")
for dep in ["docker", "git"]:
if shutil.which(dep):
print(f" {ok} {dep}")
else:
print(f" {fail} {dep} — not found")
Gotchas & Lessons Learned
-
PATH forwarding is mandatory for service files. systemd and launchd run with minimal PATH (/usr/bin:/bin). If your tool shells out to docker, git, etc., they won't be found unless you bake PATH into the service file. Capture the installer's PATH at service install time. The doctor command helps diagnose this.
-
launchd uses bootstrap/bootout, not load/unload. The older launchctl load is deprecated. Use the newer bootstrap/bootout API with a gui/{uid} domain. Keep a fallback to load for older macOS versions.
-
The upgrade must regenerate the service file. After reinstalling, the binary path may have changed (new venv, new tool directory). The regenerate step ensures the service file points to the current binary. Without this, the service starts the old binary after upgrade.
-
Editable installs should skip upgrade. Return (False, "editable install") for editable installs. Upgrading an editable install via uv tool install --force would overwrite the dev checkout with a release build — almost certainly not what the developer intended.
-
Doctor as post-upgrade verification. The last step of the upgrade flow is doctor(). This catches issues immediately — wrong PATH in service file, missing dependency after upgrade, failed service start — instead of waiting for the user to discover them.
-
No rollback on failed upgrade. If reinstall fails mid-upgrade, the service is stopped and the old binary is gone. Neither project implements rollback. For critical deployments, consider snapshotting the venv before uv tool install --force.