What's a quick-and-dirty way to make sure that only one instance of a shell script is running at a given time?
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Here's an implementation that uses a lockfile and echos a pid into it. This protects if the process is killed before removing the pidfile:
The trick here is the kill -0 which doesn't deliver any signal but just checks if a pid is running. Also the call to trap will ensure that the lockfile is removed even when your process is killed (except kill -9). |
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All approaches that test the existence of "lock files" are flawed. Why? Because there is no way to check whether a file exists and create it in a single atomic action. Because of this; there is a race condition that WILL make your attempts at mutual exclusion break. Instead, you need to use
For all details, see the excellent BashFAQ: http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/045 If you want to take care of stale locks, fuser(1) comes in handy. The only downside here is that the operation takes about a second, so it isn't instant. Here's a function I wrote once that solves the problem using fuser:
You can use it in a script like so:
If you don't care about portability (these solutions should work on pretty much any UNIX box), Linux' fuser(1) offers some additional options and there is also flock(1). |
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There's a wrapper around the flock(2) system call called, unimaginatively, flock(1). This makes it relatively easy to reliably obtain exclusive locks without worrying about cleanup etc. There are examples on the man page as to how to use it in a shell script. |
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Another option is to use shell's In brief:
This causes the shell to call:
which atomically creates the file or fails if the file already exists. According to a comment on BashFAQ 045, this may fail in
Interesting that How you do the Delete on clean exit New runs fail until the issue that caused the unclean exit to be resolved and the lockfile is manually removed.
Delete on any exit New runs succeed provided the script is not already running.
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To make locking reliable you need an atomic operation. Many of the above proposals are not atomic. The proposed lockfile(1) utility looks promising as the man-page mentioned, that its "NFS-resistant". If your OS does not support lockfile(1) and your solution has to work on NFS, you have not many options.... NFSv2 has two atomic operations:
With NFSv3 the create call is also atomic. Directory operations are NOT atomic under NFSv2 and NFSv3 (please refer to the book 'NFS Illustrated' by Brent Callaghan, ISBN 0-201-32570-5; Brent is a NFS-veteran at Sun). Knowing this, you can implement spin-locks for files and directories (in shell, not PHP): lock current dir:
lock a file:
unlock current dir (assumption, the running process really acquired the lock):
unlock a file (assumption, the running process really acquired the lock):
Remove is also not atomic, therefore first the rename (which is atomic) and then the remove. For the symlink and rename calls, both filenames have to reside on the same filesystem. My proposal: use only simple filenames (no paths) and put file and lock into the same directory. |
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Create a lock file in a known location and check for existence on script start? Putting the PID in the file might be helpful if someone's attempting to track down an errant instance that's preventing execution of the script. |
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PID and lockfiles are definitely the most reliable. When you attempt to run the program, it can check for the lockfile which and if it exists, it can use |
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Quick and dirty?
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Some unixes have From the manpage:
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The issues with some of the above answers is that they are not atomic, so you could still run into issues if two scripts tried to run at about the same time. |
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When targeting a Debian machine I find the Here's my solution which uses To use it simply call
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I find that bmdhack's solution is the most practical, at least for my use case. Using flock and lockfile rely on removing the lockfile using rm when the script terminates, which can't always be guaranteed (e.g., kill -9). I would change one minor thing about bmdhack's solution: It makes a point of removing the lock file, without stating that this is unnecessary for the safe working of this semaphore. His use of kill -0 ensures that an old lockfile for a dead process will simply be ignored/over-written. My simplified solution is therefore to simply add the following to the top of your singleton:
Of course, this script still has the flaw that processes that are likely to start at the same time have a race hazard, as the lock test and set operations are not a single atomic action. But the proposed solution for this by lhunath to use mkdir has the flaw that a killed script may leave behind the directory, thus preventing other instances from running. |
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If flock's limitations, which have already been described elsewhere on this thread, aren't an issue for you, then this should work:
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Actually although the answer of bmdhacks is almost good, there is a slight chance the second script to run after first checked the lockfile and before it wrote it. So they both will write the lock file and they will both be running. Here is how to make it work for sure:
The P.S. I didn't see that Mikel already answered the question correctly, although he didn't include the trap command to reduce the chance the lock file will be left over after stopping the script with Ctrl-C for example. So this is the complete solution |
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