I have a script which runs a long running process. This process is currently stopped after a timeout.
#!/bin/bash
timeout 3600 ./longrunningprocess
My problem is now that this process does not return before the timeout is reached and sometimes I need to stop it earlier.
What do I need?
I want to start some other script in parallel which checks periodically if my longrunningprocess should stop. When this bash script returns, the timeout command should be killed.
Any idea how I could achieve that?
Is there anything like the timeout command? Not with a timespan but a script I could start and which is like the event trigger?
E.g.
#!/bin/bash
fancyCommandKillsSecondCommandIfFirstCommandReturns "./myPeriodicScript.sh" "timeout 3600 ./longrunningprocess"
Thanks!
Edit: Something like "Start 2 Processes in parallel and kill both if one returns" would also work...
Edit2: The answers gave me some ideas for a script:
#!/bin/bash
FirstProcess="${1}"
SecondProcess="${2}"
exec $FirstProcess &
PID1=$!
exec $SecondProcess &
PID2=$!
function killall {
if ps -p $PID1 > /dev/null
then
kill -9 $PID1
fi
if ps -p $PID2 > /dev/null
then
kill -9 $PID2
fi
}
trap killall EXIT
while true; do
if ! ps -p $PID1 > /dev/null
then
exit;
fi
if ! ps -p $PID2 > /dev/null
then
exit;
fi
sleep 5;
done
This kind of does what I want. Is there any native functionality or a better way to do this?
crontab
to launch a periodic script checking and killing your job. For the kill itself, I don't know.