How does one get their current process ID (pid) from the Linux command line in a shell-agnostic, language-agnostic way?
pidof(8)
appears to have no option to get the calling process' pid
. Bash, of course, has $$
- but for my generic usage, I can't rely on a shell (Bash or otherwise). And in some cases, I can't write a script or compilable program, so Bash / Python / C / C++ (etc.) will not work.
Here's a specific use case: I want to get the pid
of the running, Python-Fabric-based, remote SSH process (where one may want to avoid assuming bash is running), so that among other things I can copy and/or create files and/or directories with unique filenames (as in mkdir /tmp/mydir.$$
).
If we can solve the Fabric-specific problem, that's helpful - but it doesn't solve my long-term problem. For general-purpose usage in all future scenarios, I just want a command that returns what $$
delivers in Bash.
cd /proc/self; cut -f 1 -d ' ' stat; cd -
is the only thing that's worked on Ubuntu server 11.04 thus far. None the other/proc
-based solutions have worked; they either generate a pid that's not the currently-running process pid, or don't deliver any number. Looking more and more like it's going to have to be a depend-on-a-shell thing. Workable, but not optimal in all cases. Ultimately, in long term, thinkpidof
should be updated with something like apidof --self
feature.