544

I start a background process from my shell script, and I would like to kill this process when my script finishes.

How to get the PID of this process from my shell script? As far as I can see variable $! contains the PID of the current script, not the background process.

4
  • 12
    $! is correct. Are you sure you're starting the script in the BG? sample please.
    – pixelbeat
    Dec 15, 2009 at 16:27
  • 7
    Yes $! is correct. I was wrong. Dec 16, 2009 at 7:31
  • 12
    $$ contains the current script PID.
    – HUB
    Mar 20, 2013 at 9:11
  • 2
    Note that $$ may be parent PID in bash: testfun() { echo "\$\$=$$ \$BASHPID=$BASHPID"; }; echo "my pid is $$"; testfun & wait Sep 22, 2020 at 12:12

9 Answers 9

807

You need to save the PID of the background process at the time you start it:

foo &
FOO_PID=$!
# do other stuff
kill $FOO_PID

You cannot use job control, since that is an interactive feature and tied to a controlling terminal. A script will not necessarily have a terminal attached at all so job control will not necessarily be available.

10
  • 40
    Since $! returns the last background process's pid. Is it possible that something starts between foo and $!, and we get that something's pid instead of foo's?
    – WiSaGaN
    Oct 16, 2013 at 9:06
  • 80
    @WiSaGaN: No. There is nothing between those lines. Any other activity on the system will not affect this. $! will expand to the PID of the last background process in that shell.
    – camh
    Oct 17, 2013 at 9:36
  • 12
    ... which hoses you if foo happens to be multiple piped commands (eg. tail -f somefile.txt | grep sometext). In such cases, you will get the PID of the grep command from $! rather than the tail command if that's what you were looking for. You will need to use jobs or ps or the likes in this instance.
    – John Rix
    Oct 14, 2014 at 13:52
  • 3
    @JohnRix: Not necessarily. You will get the pid of grep, but if you kill that, tail will get a SIGPIPE when it tries to write to the pipe. But as soon as you try to get into any tricky process management/control, bash/shell becomes quite painful.
    – camh
    Oct 15, 2014 at 4:20
  • 9
    Another worthy solution is suggested in (a comment to an answer to) How to get pid of just started process: oh, and the "oneliner": /bin/sh -c 'echo $$>/tmp/my.pid && exec program args' & – sysfault Nov 24 '10 at 14:28 Jun 2, 2015 at 14:40
196

You can use the jobs -l command to get to a particular jobL

^Z
[1]+  Stopped                 guard

my_mac:workspace r$ jobs -l
[1]+ 46841 Suspended: 18           guard

In this case, 46841 is the PID.

From help jobs:

-l Report the process group ID and working directory of the jobs.

jobs -p is another option which shows just the PIDs.

7
  • 2
    To use this in a shell script, you'd have to process the output.
    – Phil
    Oct 15, 2013 at 18:22
  • 12
    @Phil To list pids only : jobs -p. To list pid of a certain job: jobs -p %3. No need to process output. Aug 27, 2014 at 14:56
  • 1
    @Erik with different commands / arguments you change the context of my comment. Without the additional argument suggested the output requires processing. Suggest an improvement to the answer!
    – Phil
    Aug 28, 2014 at 17:45
  • 2
    Saving the PID from $! just after you started it is more portable and more straightforward in most situations. That's what the currently accepted answer does.
    – tripleee
    Sep 18, 2017 at 8:36
  • 2
    @Calimo I agree that jobs is the way to go in an interactive session, but this is posted as an answer to a question specifically about how to do this programmatically from a script.
    – tripleee
    Feb 10, 2019 at 13:24
71
  • $$ is the current script's pid
  • $! is the pid of the last background process

Here's a sample transcript from a bash session (%1 refers to the ordinal number of background process as seen from jobs):

$ echo $$
3748

$ sleep 100 &
[1] 192

$ echo $!
192

$ kill %1

[1]+  Terminated              sleep 100
2
  • echo %1 does not return the background process on my Ubuntu whereas echo $! does
    – Timo
    Dec 2, 2017 at 8:03
  • Note that $$ is not always the current PID. For example, if you define a new function in bash and run the function in the background, the $$ within that function contains the PID of the process that started the function in the background. If you need PID of the actual process running any given code, you have to use $BASHPID, instead. Sep 22, 2020 at 12:07
37

An even simpler way to kill all child process of a bash script:

pkill -P $$

The -P flag works the same way with pkill and pgrep - it gets child processes, only with pkill the child processes get killed and with pgrep child PIDs are printed to stdout.

5
  • 1
    Very convenient! This is the best way to ensure you don't leave opened processes on the background.
    – lepe
    Oct 8, 2015 at 6:40
  • @lepe: Not quite. If you are a grandparent, this won't work: after bash -c 'bash -c "sleep 300 &"' & running pgrep -P $$ shows nothing, because the sleep will not be a direct child of your shell.
    – petre
    Feb 15, 2016 at 8:45
  • 2
    @AlexeyPolonsky: it should be: kill all child procs of a shell, not a script. Because $$ refers to the current shell.
    – Timo
    Dec 2, 2017 at 8:23
  • performing bash -c 'bash -c "sleep 300 &"' & ; pgrep -P $$ , I get on stdout [1] <pid>. So at least it shows something, but this is probably not the output of pgrep`
    – Timo
    Dec 2, 2017 at 8:29
  • Even processes can deattach them from parent process. Simple trick is to call fork (create a grandchild) and then just let the child process exit while grandchild continues doing the work. (daemonization is the keyword) But even if child keeps running too pkill -P isn't enough to propagate signal to grandchilds. Tool like pstree is required to follow whole dependant process tree. But this won't catch daemons started from the process as their parent is process 1. eg: bash -c 'bash -c "sleep 10 & wait $!"' & sleep 0.1; pstree -p $$ Nov 7, 2019 at 4:20
6

this is what I have done. Check it out, hope it can help.

#!/bin/bash
#
# So something to show.
echo "UNO" >  UNO.txt
echo "DOS" >  DOS.txt
#
# Initialize Pid List
dPidLst=""
#
# Generate background processes
tail -f UNO.txt&
dPidLst="$dPidLst $!"
tail -f DOS.txt&
dPidLst="$dPidLst $!"
#
# Report process IDs
echo PID=$$
echo dPidLst=$dPidLst
#
# Show process on current shell
ps -f
#
# Start killing background processes from list
for dPid in $dPidLst
do
        echo killing $dPid. Process is still there.
        ps | grep $dPid
        kill $dPid
        ps | grep $dPid
        echo Just ran "'"ps"'" command, $dPid must not show again.
done

Then just run it as: ./bgkill.sh with proper permissions of course

root@umsstd22 [P]:~# ./bgkill.sh
PID=23757
dPidLst= 23758 23759
UNO
DOS
UID        PID  PPID  C STIME TTY          TIME CMD
root      3937  3935  0 11:07 pts/5    00:00:00 -bash
root     23757  3937  0 11:55 pts/5    00:00:00 /bin/bash ./bgkill.sh
root     23758 23757  0 11:55 pts/5    00:00:00 tail -f UNO.txt
root     23759 23757  0 11:55 pts/5    00:00:00 tail -f DOS.txt
root     23760 23757  0 11:55 pts/5    00:00:00 ps -f
killing 23758. Process is still there.
23758 pts/5    00:00:00 tail
./bgkill.sh: line 24: 23758 Terminated              tail -f UNO.txt
Just ran 'ps' command, 23758 must not show again.
killing 23759. Process is still there.
23759 pts/5    00:00:00 tail
./bgkill.sh: line 24: 23759 Terminated              tail -f DOS.txt
Just ran 'ps' command, 23759 must not show again.
root@umsstd22 [P]:~# ps -f
UID        PID  PPID  C STIME TTY          TIME CMD
root      3937  3935  0 11:07 pts/5    00:00:00 -bash
root     24200  3937  0 11:56 pts/5    00:00:00 ps -f
1
  • Good call! Don't know if it is the optimal approach, but works fine.
    – jonathask
    May 10, 2023 at 1:07
4

pgrep can get you all of the child PIDs of a parent process. As mentioned earlier $$ is the current scripts PID. So, if you want a script that cleans up after itself, this should do the trick:

trap 'kill $( pgrep -P $$ | tr "\n" " " )' SIGINT SIGTERM EXIT
6
  • Wouldn't this kill the lot?
    – Phil
    Oct 15, 2013 at 18:24
  • Yes it would, the question never mentioned keeping some background children alive upon exit. Oct 24, 2013 at 4:44
  • trap 'pkill -P $$' SIGING SIGTERM EXIT looks simpler, but I did not test it.
    – petre
    Feb 15, 2016 at 8:36
  • For compatibility, don't use the SIG prefix. It is allowed by POSIX but just as an extension that implementations may support: pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/utilities/trap.html The dash shell for example does not.
    – josch
    Dec 4, 2018 at 9:46
  • Assuming if you have pgrep you may also have pkill the shorter version is more concise.
    – dragon788
    Nov 1, 2020 at 19:10
4

You might also be able to use pstree:

pstree -p user

This typically gives a text representation of all the processes for the "user" and the -p option gives the process-id. It does not depend, as far as I understand, on having the processes be owned by the current shell. It also shows forks.

1
  • 2
    To use this in a shell script, you'd have to heavily process the output.
    – Phil
    Oct 15, 2013 at 18:22
0

I have run into this problem many times provisioning various infrastructure objects. Many times you need a temp proxy using kubectl or a temp port forward. I have found the timeout command to be a good solution for these, since it allows my script to be self contained and I can be assured that the process will end. I try to set small timeouts and rerun the script if I need still need it.

0

If you're not able to get the PID directly after starting the job, you could also try this and get the PID later:

foo &

# do some stuff and then

pid=$(ps -aux | grep foo | tr -s ' ' | cut -d\  -f2)
kill $pid

Explanation:

  • ps get information for all processes incl. command
  • grep is filtering for your command
  • tr is removing duplicate spaces for cut
  • cut is getting you the column with the PID (2 in this case)

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