Given the pid of a Linux process, I want to check, from a C program, if the process is still running.
6 Answers
Issue a kill(2)
system call with 0
as the signal. If the call succeeds, it means that a process with this pid exists.
If the call fails and errno
is set to ESRCH
, a process with such a pid does not exist.
Quoting the POSIX standard:
If sig is 0 (the null signal), error checking is performed but no signal is actually sent. The null signal can be used to check the validity of pid.
Note that you are not safe from race conditions: it is possible that the target process has exited and another process with the same pid has been started in the meantime. Or the process may exit very quickly after you check it, and you could do a decision based on outdated information.
Only if the given pid is of a child process (fork
'ed from the current one), you can use waitpid(2)
with the WNOHANG
option, or try to catch SIGCHLD
signals. These are safe from race conditions, but are only relevant to child processes.
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7The call succeeding does not mean that the process exists. It means some process exists with that PID, which may or may not be the process that he wanted to know about. Feb 5, 2012 at 21:27
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18The
kill
method is safe if and only if the process you're testing for is your own child process. In this case, the process id belongs to you and cannot be reused until youwait
for it. Otherwise, any use of a pid is a serious bug. Feb 5, 2012 at 23:15 -
After following your example and from the man page of
kill()
I get return value -1 instead of the expected ESRCH. Is there something I'm doing wrong?perror()
givesNo such process
. Feb 13, 2019 at 14:40 -
2@MarvinEffing I know this is an old reply, but in case it helps someone else, you have to check
errno
instead. The return code ofkill()
will be -1 if there is an error. This is pointed in the answer and also in the documentation.– SRGNov 3, 2019 at 14:14
kill(pid, 0)
is the typical approach, as @blagovest-buyukliev said. But if the process you are checking might be owned by a different user, and you don't want to take the extra steps to check whether errno == ESRCH
, it turns out that
(getpgid(pid) >= 0)
is an effective one-step method for determining if any process has the given PID (since you are allowed to inspect the process group ID even for processes that don't belong to you).
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Sometimes process exits but getpgid(pid) still returns positive value. Jan 17, 2019 at 3:00
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2@tianyapiaozi I suspect that if that is the case, the process has exited but has not yet been reaped (the process record still exists in a "zombie" state until the parent process checks on it to get its return value). You are right, though, it's not strictly defined what it means here if a process "exists". I'm pretty confident, at least, that if this expression returns true, then
kill(pid, 0)
will also.– the paulJan 17, 2019 at 19:38 -
1
Use procfs.
#include <sys/stat.h>
[...]
struct stat sts;
if (stat("/proc/<pid>", &sts) == -1 && errno == ENOENT) {
// process doesn't exist
}
Easily portable to
- Solaris
- IRIX
- Tru64 UNIX
- BSD
- Linux
- IBM AIX
- QNX
- Plan 9 from Bell Labs
You can issue a kill(2)
system call with 0
as the signal.
There's nothing unsafe about kill -0
. The program
must be aware that the result can become obsolete at any time
(including that the pid can get reused before kill is called),
that's all. And using procfs instead does use the pid too,
and doing so in a more cumbersome and nonstandard way.
As an addendum to the /proc filesystem method, you can check the /proc/<pid>/cmdline (assuming it was started from the command line) to see if it is the process you want.
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2commandline has two meanings - one (the one in /proc/<pid>/cmdline) is "the name of the program run, with a list of arguments passed to it") applies to EVERY process, even if not launched from the "command line" (different meaning: a text-based interface for the benefit of human beings). Sep 23, 2014 at 3:19
ps -p $PID > /dev/null 2>&1; echo $?
This command return 0
if process with $PID
is still running. Otherwise it returns 1
.
One can use this command in OSX terminal too.
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1That doesn't answer the question ("... from a C program") and suffers from the same race conditions as the
kill
approach. Sep 4, 2016 at 17:43