I have some unit tests that need an X11 display so I plan to start Xvfb before running them, but to start Xvfb I will need a free display number to connect it to. My best guess is to see what's free in /tmp/.X11-unix but I'm not sure how to handle the race if many tests try to start simultaneously.

sshd must do this, does anyone know how?

link|improve this question

50% accept rate
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

There's no point in trying to find a free display number. As you have guessed, between the time you find a free one and the time Xvfb starts, another X server might have taken the port you thought was free. So, better to just try to launch Xvfb, handle the failure if the port is taken, and then retry at the next port until you succeed or run out of ports to try.

#!/bin/bash
DISPLAY_NUM=0
unset TEST_HAS_RUN
until [ $TEST_HAS_RUN ] || (( $DISPLAY_NUM > 10 ))
do
 Xvfb :$DISPLAY_NUM &
 jobs
 sleep 2  # assumption here is that Xvfb will exit quickly if it can't launch
 if jobs | grep Xvfb
 then  
   echo launching test on :$DISPLAY_NUM
   xterm -display :$DISPLAY_NUM
   TEST_HAS_RUN=1
   kill %-
 else   
   let DISPLAY_NUM=$DISPLAY_NUM+1
 fi
done
link|improve this answer
feedback

Why not exploit the fact that every X11 server puts a "Lock" file into /tmp?

This is called /tmp/.Xn-lock where "n" is the Display id. (Also note the leading . in the filename).

This is the mechanism that Xserver itself uses to check for duplication, and it appears to be consistent on all *nix platforms I have tried (HP-UX, Linux, ...)

So you could adapt your script thus (forgive me for syntax errors, I'm nore accustomed to C shell than Bourne/Korn shell scripting)

DISPLAY_NUM=0

do

if ( -e /tmp/.X$DISPLAY_NUM-lock ) then

 let DISPLAY_NUM=$DISPLAY_NUM+1

else

 Xvfb :$DISPLAY_NUM -screen 0 1280x1024x24 -ac   (or whatever args take your fancy)

fi

done

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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