Look at the GNU timeout
command. This kills the process if it has not completed in a given time; you'd simply wrap a loop around this to wait for the timeout
to complete successfully, with delays between retries as appropriate, etc.
while timeout -k 70 60 -- my_command; [ $? = 124 ]
do sleep 2 # Pause before retry
done
If you must do it in pure bash
(which is not really feasible - bash
uses lots of other commands), then you are in for a world of pain and frustration with signal handlers and all sorts of issues.
Please expand on your answer a little. -k 70
is --kill-after= 70
seconds, 124 exit on timeout; what is the 60?
The linked documentation does explain the command; I don't really plan to repeat it all here. The synopsis is timeout [options] duration command [arg]...
; one of the options is -k duration
. The -k duration
says "if the command does not die after the SIGTERM signal is sent at 60 seconds, send a SIGKILL signal at 70 seconds" (and the command should die then). There are a number of documented exit statuses; 124 indicates that the command timed out; 137 that it died after being sent the SIGKILL signal, and so on. You can't tell if the command itself exits with one of the documented statuses.
retry
do? Do you want it to just terminate the earlier attempt and spawn a new one?retry
grin