vote up 1 vote down star
1

I have some Perl code that executes a shell script for multiple parameters, to simplify, I'll just assume that I have code that looks like this:

for $p (@a){
    system("/path/to/file.sh $p&");
}

I'd like to do some more things after that, but I can't find a way to wait for all the child processes to finish before continuing.

Converting the code to use fork() would be difficult. Isn't there an easier way?

flag

Do you require the actual return code from file.sh? Can you change the script so that it writes to a file when complete? – Matt Kane May 26 at 16:18
Why would converting the code to fork be difficult? Hide all the details in a subroutine. You could even redefine system() to call your new subroutine instead. – brian d foy May 26 at 16:35
I'll probably just split this part to a separate script that does the forking, and call that from the system call... – Osama ALASSIRY May 26 at 17:51

3 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

Using fork/exec/wait isn't so bad:

my @a = (1, 2, 3);
for my $p (@a) {
   my $pid = fork();
   if ($pid == -1) {
       die;
   } elsif ($pid == 0) {
      exec '/bin/sleep', $p or die;
   }
}
while (wait() != -1) {}
print "Done\n";
link|flag
1  
You aren't checking for a failed fork and you are pushing the bareword pid onto @pids, not $pid. The exit should probably be a die instead, if it executes that means the exec failed. – Chas. Owens May 26 at 17:14
Fixed. Thanks, I'm not really a native speaker of Perl. – Dave May 28 at 17:21
vote up 6 vote down

You are going to have to change something, changing the code to use fork is probably simpler, but if you are dead set against using fork, you could use a wrapper shell script that touches a file when it is done and then have your Perl code check for the existence of the files.

Here is the wrapper:

#!/bin/bash

$*

touch /tmp/$2.$PPID

Your Perl code would look like:

for my $p (@a){
    system("/path/to/wrapper.sh /path/to/file.sh $p &");
}
while (@a) {
    delete $a[0] if -f "/tmp/$a[0].$$";
}

But I think the forking code is safer and clearer:

my @pids;
for my $p (@a) {
    die "could not fork" unless defined(my $pid = fork);\
    unless ($pid) { #child execs
        exec "/path/to/file.sh", $p;
        die "exec of file.sh failed";
    }
    push @pids, $pid; #parent stores children's pids
}

#wait for all children to finish
for my $pid (@pids) {
    waitpid $pid, 0;
}
link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Converting to fork() might be difficult, but it is the correct tool. system() is a blocking call; you're getting the non-blocking behavior by executing a shell and telling it to run your scripts in the background. That means that Perl has no idea what the PIDs of the children might be, which means your script does not know what to wait for.

You could try to communicate the PIDs up to the Perl script, but that quickly gets out of hand. Use fork().

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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