6

I have a script wherein I stop (kill) a process. Immediately thereafter, I'd like some code to check if the process is indeed stopped, and if not, exit the script (and if it indeed is stopped, the script will of course continue.) Here's how I tried to do it:

if (Get-Process "notepad" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) {
    Write-Host "Program still running somehow, terminating script..."
    exit
}
else
{ Write-Host "Program stopped." }

I thought I had it figured out that the statement (Get-Process "progname" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) would eval to $true if there was one or more processes running (i.e. there was output returned), and $false if no output was returned (I specified the -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue to make sure there would be no output returned when there was not program found by that name.) It worked in testing when I ran this code block using a running program (say, "notepad"), and also when I tried a non-existant program (like say "notepadxxx".)

However, when I then integrated it into my larger program, and put it immediately after the line which terminates the program, as so:

Write-Host "Terminating Program..."
Stop-Process -Name "notepad" -Force
if (Get-Process "notepad" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) {
    Write-Host "Program still running somehow, terminating script..."
    exit
}
else
{ Write-Host "Program stopped." }

the Get-Process line evals to $true, and ends the script. Is this just a race condition between the Stop-Process line, and the subsequent Get-Process line, or is it a logic flaw? (and if so, what's the fix?)

2
  • possible duplicate of powershell: synchronous stop-process
    – neontapir
    Jul 25, 2013 at 19:08
  • That's kinda what I want @neontapir, but this question is more about the test afterwords that ensures the process is indeed stopped before continuing on. So, I'd say not exactly a duplicate. However, I do appreciate the reference, and have incorporated it; but, I still am getting the logic problem :( Jul 25, 2013 at 19:34

2 Answers 2

3

Try this for the if condition:

if (Get-Process "notepad" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | Where-Object {-not $_.HasExited }) 
1
  • This appears to work for me... tested with one and multiple instances for the program ("notepad" for testing.) Thanks! Jul 25, 2013 at 20:07
0

I think the problem is that you're checking too immediately thereafter. The if statement is executed before the process has a chance to stop. When you use Stop-Process, it sends a stop signal to the command and moves on, it doesn't wait for the process to actually stop. Try adding Sleep 1, or even Sleep .1, between Stop-Process [...] and if (Get-Process [...]. Give it a moment to terminate before checking whether it did.

4
  • So I did try to make the Stop-Process wait by reforming the command line as Stop-Process -Name "notepad" -Force -PassThru | Wait-Process but when I test thereafter with if ((Get-Process "notepad" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) -ne $null) { I'm still eval'ing to $true, since I get Program still running somehow, terminating script... as the output (and the script term's hitting the exit.) Jul 25, 2013 at 19:40
  • Appears to be a race condition, by the way... If I put a Start-Sleep -milli 300 in between the Stop-Process line and the if line, then the logic works. Jul 25, 2013 at 20:09
  • But that's not what I suggested. Wait-Process won't work because Stop-Process doesn't manage/oversee the stopping of the process, it just sends a signal to the process to terminate. That was the whole point, that the invocation of Stop-Process is considered complete when it sends the instruction to the process, not when the process is actually stopped. Put Sleep 1 in between the commands and I think you'll see that it works.
    – Adi Inbar
    Jul 25, 2013 at 20:20
  • Oh...okay, you did try it, I hadn't refreshed the page. But I'll leave the comment as an explanation of why Wait-Process is subject to the same problem and doesn't make a difference.
    – Adi Inbar
    Jul 25, 2013 at 20:22

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