9

I need to obtain the underlying OS PID for a Process I start. The solution I'm using now involves access to a private field through reflection using code like this:

private long getLongField(Object target, String fieldName) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException {
    Field field = target.getClass().getDeclaredField(fieldName);
    field.setAccessible(true);
    long value = field.getLong(target);
    field.setAccessible(false);
    return value;
}

It works but there are several problems with this approach, one being that you need to do extra work on Windows because the Windows-specific Process subclass doesn't store a "pid" field but a "handle" field (so you need to do a bit of JNA to get the actual pid), and another being that starting with Java 9 it triggers a bunch of scary warnings like "WARNING: An illegal reflective access operation has occurred".

So the question: is there a better way (clean, OS independent, garanteed not to break in a future release of Java) to obtain the pid? Shouldn't this be exposed by Java in the first place?

1 Answer 1

7

You can make use of the Process#pid introduced in Java9, a sample of that would be as:

ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("echo", "Hello World!");
Process p = pb.start();
System.out.printf("Process ID: %s%n", p.pid());

The documentation of the method reads:

* Returns the native process ID of the process.
* The native process ID is an identification number that the operating
* system assigns to the process.

and noteworthy as well from the same

* @throws UnsupportedOperationException if the Process implementation
*         does not support this operation
7
  • 3
    Nice little addition to Java 9. Note that this might trigger an UnsupportedOperationException if the platform doesn't happen to support exposing the process ID. Oct 24, 2018 at 17:26
  • @MarkPeters Yes, you're right. I'd updated with the documentation as well.
    – Naman
    Oct 24, 2018 at 17:28
  • Nice, I should probably have RTFM :) Is it known on which platforms this is supported currently? Win/Mac/Linux I expect? Oct 25, 2018 at 8:15
  • 2
    Not very sure about the general guidance over the platforms it supports. Yet, I can confirm using this on Mac for sure. @OlivierGérardin
    – Naman
    Oct 25, 2018 at 8:30
  • 2
    You can assume that it will work on all platforms where the Reflection hack worked in the past (as that’s a sign of an availability of a pid). But it’s also worth looking at the methods toHandle() and info() and their returned ProcessHandle and ProcessHandle.Info APIs. Perhaps, you don’t need the pid anymore, as whatever you want to do with it, can now be done directly with a Java API…
    – Holger
    Oct 26, 2018 at 8:17

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