This answer explains how to get the pid of the new process when using Perl's exec()
. The pid doesn't even change, so all you need to do is get the pid of the original script. But it doesn't work if I redirect the output to a file as part of the command, which I need to do.
say "my pid is $$";
exec("childscript.pl"); # same pid
But if I redirect the output as part of the command:
say "my pid is $$";
exec("childscript.pl > log.txt"); # different pid, usually old pid + 1
exec("childscript.pl > log.txt 2>&1 &"); # same
then the new pid is one higher than the old one (which is probably just because they were spawned in succession and not reliable). I tested this both by looking at the output, and by inserting a sleep 30
into "childscript.pl" so that I could see it with ps -e
.
My guess here is that redirecting the output causes a new process to do the writing. But I need the pid of the program, and I have no control over the program except for the fact that I can execute it. (It needs to run in the background too.)