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To be specific, I have two command need to be run in shell on Ubuntu at the same time, like command_A and command_B. And I have some other commands need to be run only after command_A and command_B has finished, named as command_rest. In addition, command_A and command_B run in separate terminals and when they are finished they can close themselves. This maybe need techniques related to signal and wait and gnome-terminal i guess, but i cannot find a solution.

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2 Answers 2

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You can do it like this using a fifo to synchronise:

# Once in either Terminal
mkfifo A B

# In first Terminal
( echo CommandA; sleep 3; echo done > A ) &

# In second Terminal
( echo CommandB; sleep 8; echo done > B ) &

# In third Terminal
read < A; read < B; echo Rest

Basically, before Rest can run, it has to have read something from both A and B and nothing will arrive for it to read until CommandA has finished and written to A and also CommandB has finished and written to B.

The above is just an example that echoes CommandA and CommandB and Rest instead of running commands that I don't have. You will actually want something like this (I have modified it so you can be in different directories in the various Terminals)

# Once in either Terminal
mkfifo  /tmp/A  /tmp/B

# In first Terminal
( CommandA; echo done > /tmp/A ) &

# In second Terminal
( CommandB; echo done > /tmp/B ) &

# In third Terminal
read < /tmp/A; read < /tmp/B; commandRest
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  • I wrote this into fifo.sh and run it using command ". fifo.sh", and its output likes the following: CommandA\n CommandB\n Rest\n [2]- Done (echo CommandA; sleep 3; echo done >A )\n [3]+ Done (echo CommandB; sleep 8; echo done >B)\n (\n is for another line)(the last line showed up when i enter another command in) It seems already worked, but i was just curious about what does the output mean at the last two lines.
    – Meng Yue
    Aug 2, 2016 at 2:11
  • The other lines are just so I can show a working example without anyone needing to have your CommandA, CommandB and CommandRest. I have updated it now so please look again. Aug 2, 2016 at 7:46
  • Thanks for updating your answer~ Maybe a specific example will clarify my question. For instance, if i want to use "read" command in two terminals and then after each has received keyboard, I write "echo finished inputing" as commandRest. I tried to implement with your method but it won't work because i will stuck at the input. And if i try to open new terminal using "gnome-terminal -e" command in CommandA and CommandB, it can show two new terminals simultaneously, but the commandRest won't wait for my input and just echo out. So i want to know how to fixed it. Thanks!
    – Meng Yue
    Aug 3, 2016 at 3:07
  • Sorry, I don't see which part is causing you a problem:-) I have made a small update to the code so you can be in different directories in the various Terminals - maybe that will help. I don't see how your CommandRest can possibly do anything till it has read the word done from both fifos - it cannot. Aug 3, 2016 at 6:38
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As you don't seem to be doing too well with fifo-based synchronisation, you could maybe try using GNU Parallel, which, when installed creates a symbolic link called sem that acts as a semaphore.

So, in Terminal 1, you would do:

sem -j 2 --id mark CommandA

and in Terminal 2, you would do:

sem -j 2 --id mark CommandB

Then, anywhere you wanted to wait for both to finish, you would do:

sem --id mark --wait ; CommandRest
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  • Thanks for additional advice. I tried sleep 10 as CommandA and CommandB and it worked well. However, when I used read as both CommandA and CommandB, echo "received" as CommandRest , and the first two will stuck, and can't receive any keyboard input. When I closed the first two terminals, the third terminal indeed shows "received". So the problem is that the command read cannot work well under this circumstance. DO you know how to fix that?
    – Meng Yue
    Aug 6, 2016 at 1:23

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