I'm trying to use a shell script to start a command. I don't care if/when/how/why it finishes. I want the process to start and run, but I want to be able to get back to my shell immediately...
5 Answers
You can just run the script in the background:
$ myscript &
Note that this is different from putting the &
inside your script, which probably won't do what you want.
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1I knew it was going to be something easy, thanks a ton... Linux just isn't my thing, but I'm trying to get up to speed... Btw, will this work when combined with nohup?– LorenVSMar 3, 2010 at 1:08
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4What is the difference between putting the & on the command line and putting it in the script? I was not aware that they were different. Jul 10, 2013 at 22:41
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11@JacobSharf, give it a try and you'll see. If the
&
is inside the script and you don't have await
, the background command will be killed when the script exits. Jul 10, 2013 at 22:47 -
1oh. That explains a lot. I was recently noticing some effect that would be caused by that. Googling it actually lead me to this page. Thanks Jul 10, 2013 at 23:05
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If
myscript
modifies the terminal environment, ex. it is a terminal initialization command that is not needed immediately and can be delayed, will it still modify the terminal environment? Oct 8, 2016 at 16:02
Everyone just forgot disown
. So here is a summary:
&
puts the job in the background.- Makes it block on attempting to read input, and
- Makes the shell not wait for its completion.
disown
removes the process from the shell's job control, but it still leaves it connected to the terminal.- One of the results is that the shell won't send it a
SIGHUP
(If the shell receives aSIGHUP
, it also sends aSIGHUP
to the process, which normally causes the process to terminate). - And obviously, it can only be applied to background jobs(because you cannot enter it when a foreground job is running).
- One of the results is that the shell won't send it a
nohup
disconnects the process from the terminal, redirects its output tonohup.out
and shields it fromSIGHUP
.- The process won't receive any sent
SIGHUP
. - Its completely independent from job control and could in principle be used also for foreground jobs(although that's not very useful).
- Usually used with
&
(as a background job).
- The process won't receive any sent
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I can't find
disown
on Debian or OS X. I thought it was a program, but I seem to be mistaken. What is it?– jwwJun 11, 2016 at 23:52 -
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9
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4
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2
nohup cmd
doesn't hangup when you close the terminal. output by default goes to nohup.out
You can combine this with backgrounding,
nohup cmd &
and get rid of the output,
nohup cmd > /dev/null 2>&1 &
you can also disown
a command. type cmd
, Ctrl-Z
, bg
, disown
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2Cool, crazy how everything combines, I think the ordering would get to me at first, but I suppose you could just memorize it ( what you wrote or "nohup cmd & > /dev/null 2>&1" :) )– LorenVSMar 3, 2010 at 21:38
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I stumbled upon this tonight. I've been fighting with a shell script for 2 days and this suggestion got things working. Thank you mucho!– JD LongMay 20, 2011 at 1:43
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Awesome, this is very useful. When running in background mode, you can check the command's output every once in a while using
tail nohup.out
, this will display the last 10 lines of the command output. I use this for rsync backup jobs to see what file it's currently at. Nov 1, 2015 at 18:32 -
What if I do this, but want to stop the background process? Feb 2, 2016 at 20:36
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The shell prints a job identifier when you start a job precisely for this purpose. You can see your running jobs at any time with
jobs
.– tripleeeAug 13, 2018 at 15:20
Alternatively, after you got the program running, you can hit Ctrl-Z which stops your program and then type
bg
which puts your last stopped program in the background. (Useful if your started something without '&' and still want it in the backgroung without restarting it)
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3Thanks, thats a cool little trick... Starting to really appreciate some of the shell goodness...– LorenVSMar 3, 2010 at 21:37
screen -m -d $command$
starts the command in a detached session. You can use screen -r
to attach to the started session. It is a wonderful tool, extremely useful also for remote sessions. Read more at man screen
.
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@LadenkovVladislav I'm 95% certain you can install screen on RedHat. I have on CentOS.– BuvinJOct 28, 2019 at 12:44
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On Ubuntu, I wanted to emulate the Windows / batch "start" command. I.e. asynchronously launch a foreground (gui) program, and continue on through a shell script. This does exactly that.– BuvinJOct 28, 2019 at 12:46
nohup
,&
anddisown
, click here to scroll to the fourth answer.