Created
January 29, 2015 17:26
-
-
Save kevin-miles/78c002ec07658468cb5b to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
How do I run a Unix process in the background?
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
In Unix, a background process executes independently of the shell, leaving the terminal free for other work. To run a process in the background, include an & (an ampersand) at the end of the command you use to run the job. Following are some examples: | |
To run the count program, which will display the process identification number of the job, enter: | |
count & | |
To check the status of your job, enter: | |
ps | |
To bring a background process to the foreground, enter: | |
fg | |
If you have more than one job suspended in the background, enter: | |
fg %# | |
Replace # with the job number, as shown in the first column of the output of the jobs command. | |
You can kill a background process by entering: | |
kill PID | |
Replace PID with the process ID of the job. If that fails, enter the following: | |
kill -KILL PID | |
To determine a job's PID, enter: | |
jobs -l | |
If you are using sh, ksh, bash, or zsh, you may prevent background processes from sending error messages to the terminal. Redirect the output to /dev/null using the following syntax: | |
count 2> /dev/null & |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment