If able to use 3rd-party tools, I'd leverage one of the 3rd-party, pre-written helpers you can call from your script (doalarm and timeout are both mentioned by the BashFAQ entry on the subject).
If writing such a thing myself without using such tools, I'd probably do something like the following:
function try_proper_shutdown() {
su oracle -c "lsnrctl stop >/dev/null"
su oracle -c "sqlplus sys/passwd as sysdba @/usr/local/PLATEX/scripts/orastop.sql >/dev/null"
}
function resort_to_harsh_shutdown() {
for progname in ora_this ora_that ; do
killall -9 $progname
done
# also need to do a bunch of cleanup with ipcs/ipcrm here
}
# here's where we start the proper shutdown approach in the background
try_proper_shutdown &
child_pid=$!
# rather than keeping a counter, we check against the actual clock each cycle
# this prevents the script from running too long if it gets delayed somewhere
# other than sleep (or if the sleep commands don't actually sleep only the
# requested time -- they don't guarantee that they will).
end_time=$(( $(date '+%s') + (60 * 5) ))
while (( $(date '+%s') < end_time )); do
if kill -0 $child_pid 2>/dev/null; then
exit 0
fi
sleep 1
done
# okay, we timed out; stop the background process that's trying to shut down nicely
# (note that alone, this won't necessarily kill its children, just the subshell we
# forked off) and then make things happen.
kill $child_pid
resort_to_harsh_shutdown
waitpid
, which actually supports a timeout value on its own. Bash is fine too, though, and I've used it (literally for exactly this purpose) in the past. (Former employer, no continuing access to the scripts, and I've slept enough times since then that I'm unlikely to remember much that's domain-specific and useful).kill -9
codepath).