27

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.

1
  • 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, think pidof should be updated with something like a pidof --self feature. Nov 28, 2011 at 2:28

6 Answers 6

67

From python:

$ python
>>> import os
>>> os.getpid()
12252
3
  • 8
    That gives the PID of the python shell! Use this instead: python3 -c "import os; print(os.getppid())"
    – Pithikos
    Oct 29, 2014 at 17:58
  • 11
    Well, this doesn't answer the question above, but it does answer the one I came here with (:
    – drevicko
    May 21, 2015 at 23:56
  • 1
    Yeah, I don't really understand why this question is tagged 'python', but I'm glad your comment is here, @Pithikos! ;-) Dec 3, 2015 at 0:49
9

$$ isn't bash-specific -- I believe that it's available in all POSIX-compliant shells, which amounts to pretty much every shell that isn't deliberately being weird.

5
  • Thx... but can't rely on ANY shell... bash or any other. Nov 26, 2011 at 20:58
  • 1
    Any system that can run an SSH server will probably have a POSIX-compliant shell. Any system weird enough to not have one is likely to also lack whatever fallback you choose, as well as other things you're implicitly depending on (like /tmp or mkdir).
    – user149341
    Nov 26, 2011 at 21:11
  • @duskwuff POSIX-compliant would exclude csh and its ilk. The way I understood its question is that the client-side process would be executing some commands on behalf of some user-defined script running in the SSH session – and the only restriction on those scripts would be that they have to be in some sort of Unix shell.
    – millimoose
    Nov 26, 2011 at 22:21
  • In Python-Fabric a "require some POSIX shell" dependence may be valid. In some other circumstances, may not be able to rely on any shell (eg, in some Python system calls... but granted Python has its own api to determine pid). Alas, if I have to depend on a shell, I have to depend on a shell. But golly, something like 'pidof --self' would be a lot better than cd /proc/self; cut -f 1 -d ' ' stat; cd - (per my comment to main question above), which has not yet been tested for portability across other Linux-es (besides my Ubuntu 11.04). Nov 28, 2011 at 2:44
  • Right; my point is simply that echo $$ is likely be just as portable as the other alternatives presented here, if not more so. (Anything using /proc, for instance, will only work on Linux; $$, on the other hand, will even work on Windows.)
    – user149341
    Nov 28, 2011 at 2:48
7

Hope this is portable enough, it relies on the PPID being the fourth field of /proc/[pid]/stat:

cut -d ' ' -f 4 /proc/self/stat

It assumes a Linux with the right shape of /proc, that the layout of /proc/[pid]/stat won't be incompatibly different from whatever Debian 6.0.1 has, that cut is a separate executable and not a shell builtin, and that cut doesn't spawn subprocesses.

As an alternative, you can get field 6 instead of field 4 to get the PID of the "session leader". Interactive shells apparently set themselves to be session leaders, and this id should remain the same across pipes and subshell invocations:

$ echo $(echo $( cut -f 6 -d ' ' /proc/self/stat ) )
23755

$ echo $(echo $( cut -f 4 -d ' ' /proc/self/stat ) )
24027

$ echo $$
23755 

That said, this introduces a dependency on the behaviour of the running shell - it has to set the session id only when it's the one whose PID you actually want. Obviously, this also won't work in scripts if you want the PID of the shell executing the script, and not the interactive one.

5
  • Doesn't appear to work, although cd /proc/self; cut -f 1 -d ' ' stat; cd - does: pastebin.com/rQmFikTN Nov 28, 2011 at 2:32
  • @JohnnyUtahh Hm, right, at that point /proc/self will point to the pid of readlink. Luckily the file also contains the ppid, I'll amend my answer to a single-command solution.
    – millimoose
    Nov 28, 2011 at 2:42
  • Ok, new flavor (cut -d ' ' -f 4 /proc/self/stat) does work, and better cmd then mine (no cd's). pastebin.com/yxiiT9HP for example session. Any idea how portable this is across many linux distro's and older revs (of Linux/kernel)? Nov 28, 2011 at 2:48
  • @JohnnyUtahh The man page for /proc mentions that one of the fields in stat exists "since Linux 2.1.22", which is an ancient version. I'm interpreting that to mean that the fields not annotated like that have existed before. The version numbers for the stat fields listed after that are also increasing, which would imply that new fields are indeed added at the end.
    – millimoose
    Nov 28, 2011 at 3:09
  • The fact the layout is tied to Linux kernel version would also imply that it's unlikely to be distro-specific. The only thing remaining is someone doing something weird to cut but a Linux will very very likely use the GNU coreutils version.
    – millimoose
    Nov 28, 2011 at 3:15
2

Great answers + comments here and here. Thx all. Combining both into one answer, providing two options with tradeoffs in POSIX-shell-required vs no-POSIX-shell-required contexts:

  1. POSIX shell available: use $$
  2. General cmdline: employ cut -d ' ' -f 4 /proc/self/stat

Example session with both methods (along with other proposed, non-working methods) shown here.

(Not sure how pertinent/useful it is to be so concerned with being shell independent, but have simply experienced many times the "run system call without shell" constraint that now seek shell-independent options whenever possible.)

1

Fewer characters and guaranteed to work:

sh -c 'echo $PPID'
0

If you have access to the proc filesystem, then /proc/self is a symlink to the current /proc/$pid. You could read the pid out of, for instance, the first column of /proc/self/stat.

If you are in python, you could use os.getpid().

2
  • /proc/self on my Ubuntu 11.04 system doesn't show pid of running process: pastebin.com/Ggg8BZYV Nov 28, 2011 at 2:41
  • when you run: "readlink -f /proc/self | xargs basename" you are getting the pid of readlink, not the pid of the shell in which you ran readlink. when you run "ll -d /proc/self" you are getting 'self' from the ll process.
    – stew
    Nov 28, 2011 at 4:05

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.