I am wondering what the best way is to detect/kill a process if it exceeds a predefined time. I know an old way was to use the watchdog/timeoutobserver class from the ant package. But this is deprecated now, so I am wondering how it should be done now?
Here is the code I have which uses watchdog:
import org.apache.tools.ant.util.Watchdog;
import org.apache.tools.ant.util.TimeoutObserver;
public class executer implements TimeoutObserver {
private int timeOut = 0;
Process process = null;
private boolean killedByTimeout =false;
public executer(int to) {
timeOut = t;
}
public String executeCommand() throws Exception {
Watchdog watchDog = null;
String templine = null;
StringBuffer outputTrace = new StringBuffer();
StringBuffer errorTrace = new StringBuffer();
Runtime runtime = Runtime.getRuntime();
try {
//instantiate a new watch dog to kill the process
//if exceeds beyond the time
watchDog = new Watchdog(getTimeout());
watchDog.addTimeoutObserver(this);
watchDog.start();
process = runtime.exec(command);
//... Code to do the execution .....
InputStream inputStream = process.getInputStream();
InputStreamReader inputStreamReader = new InputStreamReader(inputStream);
bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(inputStreamReader);
while (((templine = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) && (!processWasKilledByTimeout)) {
outputTrace.append(templine);
outputTrace.append("\n");
}
this.setStandardOut(outputTrace);
int returnCode = process.waitFor();
//Set the return code
this.setReturnCode(returnCode);
if (processWasKilledByTimeout) {
//As process was killed by timeout just throw an exception
throw new InterruptedException("Process was killed before the waitFor was reached.");
}
} finally {
// stop the watchdog as no longer needed.
if (aWatchDog != null) {
aWatchDog.stop();
}
try {
// close buffered readers etc
} catch Exception() {
}
//Destroy process
// Process.destroy() sends a SIGTERM to the process. The default action
// when SIGTERM is received is to terminate, but any process is free to
// ignore the signal or catch it and respond differently.
//
// Also, the process started by Java might have created additional
// processes that don't receive the signal at all.
if(process != null) {
process.destroy();
}
}
public void timeoutOccured(Watchdog arg0) {
killedByTimeout = true;
if (process != null){
process.destroy();
}
arg0.stop();
}
}
}
Any help would be greatly appreciated as I am a bit lost. I am trying to take this up to Java 7, but I am not uptodate with the best way to kill it if it hangs beyond the alloted time.
Thanks,