I can start a background process like this:
>user@host ~ $ sleep 2m &
>[1] 123456
The job number and pid [1] 123456
are displayed immediately after starting the background job.
After starting the job, I can check its status using jobs -l
.
>user@host ~ $ jobs -l
>[1] 123456 Running sleep 2m &
I would like to see the full output of jobs -l
when I start my background process like this:
>user@host ~ $ sleep 2m &
>[1] 123456 Running sleep 2m &
I would also be happy with just the command, like this:
>user@host ~ $ sleep 2m &
>[1] 123456 sleep 2m &
I have looked in man pages for some environment variable that controls what is displayed but haven't found it yet. Is this possible and if so, how can it be done?
jobs -l
. Does that include other background jobs that are already running, or just the one you just started?sleep 30 & jobs -l %%
though it would print the pid twice