Documentation

You are viewing the documentation for the 2.0.x release series. The latest stable release series is 3.0.x.

§Starting your application in production mode

There are several ways to deploy a Play application in production mode. Let’s start by using the simplest way, using a local Play installation.

§Using the start command

The easiest way to start an application in production mode is to use the start command from the Play console. This requires a Play 2.0 installation on the server.

[My first application] $ start

Note that the run command is only for development mode and should never be used to run an application in production. For each request a complete check is handled by sbt.

When you run the start command, Play forks a new JVM and runs the default Netty HTTP server. The standard output stream is redirected to the Play console, so you can monitor its status.

The server’s process id is displayed at bootstrap and written to the RUNNING_PID file. To kill a running Play server, it is enough to send a SIGTERM to the process to properly shutdown the application.

If you type Ctrl+D, the Play console will quit, but the created server process will continue running in background. The forked JVM’s standard output stream is then closed, and logging can be read from the logs/application.log file.

If you type Ctrl+C, you will kill both JVMs: the Play console and the forked Play server.

Alternatively you can directly use play start at your OS command prompt, which does the same thing:

$ play start

Note: the HTTP port can be set by passing -Dhttp.port system variable

§Using the stage task

The problem with the start command is that it starts the application interactively, which means that human interaction is needed, and Ctrl+D is required to detach the process. This solution is not really convenient for automated deployment.

You can use the stage task to prepare your application to be run in place. The typical command for preparing a project to be run in place is:

$ play clean compile stage

This cleans and compiles your application, retrieves the required dependencies and copies them to the target/staged directory. It also creates a target/start script that runs the Play server.

You can start your application using:

$ target/start

The generated start script is very simple - in fact, you could even execute the java command directly.

If you don’t have Play installed on the server, you can use sbt to do the same thing:

$ sbt clean compile stage

Found an error in this documentation? The source code for this page can be found here. After reading the documentation guidelines, please feel free to contribute a pull request. Have questions or advice to share? Go to our community forums to start a conversation with the community.