I am writing a script that will launch another process and after a period of time kill it if it hasn't exited on its own. Since starting this, I came to realize that the timeout
command is the right way to do this, but I'm still confused about why one of my approaches was failing.
Here's what I was trying:
#!/bin/bash
backgroundScript.sh &
for((i=0; i<60; i++)); do
if ! kill -0 %1; then
exit
fi
sleep 1
done
kill %1
I was surprised to find that kill -0 %1
was always succeeding, even when the process in the background finished. If I used the PID for that process, so the if
within the loop became:
if ! kill -0 $!; then
it worked fine. So why wasn't the jobspec working for me there?
kill()
system call only checks whether the process exists; it doesn't actually send any signal to the process.jobs
in the loop changed the behaviour, depending on the position of thejobs
call (sometimes it aborted as expected, sometimes the bug of not-aborting remained). Also, sourcing vs. calling the script ((. ./x.sh)
vs.(./x.sh)
) evades the bug. I'd call the mechanism ofkill -0 %1
brittle. One more thing:strace
showed that in the bug case thekill
wasn't even executed, even if it was debug printed (viaset -x
).