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* 2:36 : mike : A slightly different would be to have another object, which is a 
daemon, which is the keeper of the PIDs. It can bind to a port and then your other 
objects would actually cause things to happen without needing a PID file.


[12:16]  <blblack> I guess what I'm saying is that start() has three possible results: success, already running, failed to start
[12:17]  <stevan> I am not as familair as you are with this stuff so I am not 100% of al the things
[12:17]  <blblack> and stop() does too: success, not running, failed to stop
[12:17]  <stevan> k
[12:17]  <stevan> perfect
[12:17]  <stevan> I will add em :)
...
[12:18]  <stevan> can you map the exit value to those three states (sorry I am not familiar with these details myself)
[12:18]  <blblack> for most people, the right answer is that start()'s success/already_running should return OK to the OS, failed returns error
[12:18]  <stevan> OK = 0, ERROR = 1?
[12:18]  <blblack> and stop()'s success/not_running should also be OK (exit 0)