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I use Tilda (drop-down terminal) on Ubuntu as my "command central" - pretty much the way others might use GNOME Do, Quicksilver or Launchy.

However, I'm struggling with how to completely detach a process (e.g. Firefox) from the terminal it's been launched from - i.e. prevent that such a (non-)child process

  • is terminated when closing the originating terminal
  • "pollutes" the originating terminal via STDOUT/STDERR

For example, in order to start Vim in a "proper" terminal window, I have tried a simple script like the following:

 exec gnome-terminal -e "vim $@" &> /dev/null &

However, that still causes pollution (also, passing a file name doesn't seem to work).

Any wisdom would be greatly appreciated!

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this is a good question but is it programming related? – Jeff Atwood Mar 23 at 12:02
@Jeff Atwood It's shell programming, right? – AndrĂ© Mar 23 at 12:26
That, too, is a good question. I think it's fair to consider Bash a programming language - although indeed the scope of this question is probably more on the sysadmin side... – AnC Mar 23 at 12:26
This is a duplicate of this question stackoverflow.com/questions/285015/… – Dana the Sane Mar 23 at 13:11
[connecting this to my now-registered account] – AnC Mar 28 at 8:25

7 Answers

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You can run your command using the nohup command, this detach your process and redirects outputs to a given file... but I am not sure that is exactly what you need ..

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I could swear I had tried nohup before using exec - but apparently not properly, as it does work like this: nohup gnome-terminal -e "vim $@" &> /dev/null & – AnC Mar 23 at 12:30
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If you are using bash, try "disown". Otherwise you can try "at now".

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"disown" don't seem to be an internal bash command (not available on my machine, and I use bash). "nohup", as Ben suggested, might be a much better (and standard) way of doing this. – Eigir Mar 23 at 12:08
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Try daemon -- should be available from your friendly package manager and comprehensively take care of every way of disassociating itself from the terminal.

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vote up 2 vote down
nohup cmd &

nohup detaches the process completely (daemonizes it)

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vote up 8 vote down

First of all; once you've started a process, you can background it by first stopping it (hit Ctrl-Z) and then typing "bg" to let it resume in the background. It's now a "job", and its stdout/stderr/stdin are still connected to your terminal.

You can start a process as backgrounded immediately by appending a "&" to the end of it:

$ firefox &

To run it in the background silenced, use this:

$ firefox </dev/null &>/dev/null &

Some additional info:

"nohup" is a program you can use to run your application with such that its stdout/stderr can be sent to a file instead and such that closing the parent script won't SIGHUP the child. However, you need to have had the foresight to have used it before you started the application. Because of the way "nohup" works, you can't just apply it to a running process.

"disown" is a bash builtin that removes a shell job from the shell's job list. What this basically means is that you can't use "fg", "bg" on it anymore, but more importantly, when you close your shell it won't hang or send a SIGHUP to that child anymore. Unlike "nohup", "disown" is used after the process has been launched and backgrounded.

What you can't do, is change the stdout/stderr/stdin of a process after having launched it. At least not from the shell. If you launch your process and tell it that its stdout is your terminal (which is what you do by default), then that process is configured to output to your terminal. Your shell has no business with the processes' FD setup, that's purely something the process itself manages. The process itself can decide whether to close its stdout/stderr/stdin or not, but you can't use your shell to force it to do so.

To manage a background process' output, you have plenty of options from scripts, "nohup" probably being the first to come to mind. But for interactive processes you start but forgot to silence (firefox < /dev/null &>/dev/null &) you can't do much, really.

I recommend you get GNU screen. With screen you can just close your running shell when the process' output becomes a bother and open a new one (^Ac).


Oh, and by the way, don't use "$@" where you're using it.

"$@" means, "$1" "$2" "$3" ..., which would turn your command into:

gnome-terminal -e "vim $1" "$2" "$3" ...

That's probably not what you want because -e only takes one argument. Use "$1" to show that your script can only handle one argument.

It's really difficult to get multiple arguments working properly in the scenario that you gave (with the gnome-terminal -e) because -e takes only one argument, which is a shell command string. You'd have to encode your arguments into one. The best and most robust, but rather cludgy, way is like so:

gnome-terminal -e "vim $(printf "%q " "$@")"

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Thanks a lot for this! Sadly I can only accept one answer. I ended up with "nohup $@ &> /dev/null &" and "alias wvim='launch.sh gnome-terminal -x vim'" – AnC Mar 23 at 21:33
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in tcsh (and maybe in other shells as well), you can use parentheses to detach the process.

Compare this:

> jobs # shows nothing
> firefox &
> jobs
[1]  + Running                       firefox

To this:

> jobs # shows nothing
> (firefox &)
> jobs # still shows nothing
>
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vote up 2 vote down

I think screen might solve your problem

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