EDIT: It seems I missed the point of this question. Despite that, I think I'll leave this here anyway for other people to find. Feel free to downvote though.
Here are other suggestions on waiting for subordinate processes to complete.
Your main process should periodically check if every subordinate processes is done. There is a multitude of ways of doing that. I'll name a few:
Before that, please insert a delay between checks to not consume all CPU in a tight loop like this:
timeout /t 1 /nobreak
Marker files
Make subordinate processes create or delete a file when they are about to finish
You can create files like this:
echo ANYTHING>FILENAME
Main script should periodically check if those files exist like this:
if exist FILENAME goto IT_EXISTS
When all/none of the files exist your task is complete.
To prevent clutter, create files in a %random%
folder inside %temp%
directory and pass its name to subordinates via arguments %1
, %2
...
Check process existance by window title
Run tasklist
and parse its output to determine if your subordinate programs still run.
Probably the easiest way is to use window name to filter out "your" processes.
Start them like this:
start "WINDOW_TITLE" "BATCH_FILE" ARGUMENTS
then search for them like this:
TASKLIST /fi "Windowtitle eq WINDOW_TITLE" | find ".exe"
if "%errorlevel%" == "0" goto PROCESS_EXISTS
if none are found your task is finished.
Further information can be found at: A, B, C
Check process existance by PID
Instead of window title you can use processes' PID.
To obtain it run your process with WMIC
as described here
External programs
You can download or write an external program to facilitate inter-process communication. Examples include:
- TCP server and clients with
netcat
- Use
mkfifo
from GnuWin32 coreutils to create a named pipe and use it
- Windows semaphores and events via custom C/C#/AutoIT program
- Utilities such as
NirCmd
and PsExec
may simplify PID checking procedure
....and more
If none of solutions work for you please edit the question to narrow down your query.