Created
February 24, 2012 09:19
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kill a proc after timeout
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#!/bin/bash | |
# | |
# The Bash shell script executes a command with a time-out. | |
# Upon time-out expiration SIGTERM (15) is sent to the process. If the signal | |
# is blocked, then the subsequent SIGKILL (9) terminates it. | |
# | |
# Based on the Bash documentation example. | |
# Hello Chet, | |
# please find attached a "little easier" :-) to comprehend | |
# time-out example. If you find it suitable, feel free to include | |
# anywhere: the very same logic as in the original examples/scripts, a | |
# little more transparent implementation to my taste. | |
# | |
# Dmitry V Golovashkin <[email protected]> | |
scriptName="${0##*/}" | |
declare -i DEFAULT_TIMEOUT=9 | |
declare -i DEFAULT_INTERVAL=1 | |
declare -i DEFAULT_DELAY=1 | |
# Timeout. | |
declare -i timeout=DEFAULT_TIMEOUT | |
# Interval between checks if the process is still alive. | |
declare -i interval=DEFAULT_INTERVAL | |
# Delay between posting the SIGTERM signal and destroying the process by SIGKILL. | |
declare -i delay=DEFAULT_DELAY | |
function printUsage() { | |
cat <<EOF | |
Synopsis | |
$scriptName [-t timeout] [-i interval] [-d delay] command | |
Execute a command with a time-out. | |
Upon time-out expiration SIGTERM (15) is sent to the process. If SIGTERM | |
signal is blocked, then the subsequent SIGKILL (9) terminates it. | |
-t timeout | |
Number of seconds to wait for command completion. | |
Default value: $DEFAULT_TIMEOUT seconds. | |
-i interval | |
Interval between checks if the process is still alive. | |
Positive integer, default value: $DEFAULT_INTERVAL seconds. | |
-d delay | |
Delay between posting the SIGTERM signal and destroying the | |
process by SIGKILL. Default value: $DEFAULT_DELAY seconds. | |
As of today, Bash does not support floating point arithmetic (sleep does), | |
therefore all delay/time values must be integers. | |
EOF | |
} | |
# Options. | |
while getopts ":t:i:d:" option; do | |
case "$option" in | |
t) timeout=$OPTARG ;; | |
i) interval=$OPTARG ;; | |
d) delay=$OPTARG ;; | |
*) printUsage; exit 1 ;; | |
esac | |
done | |
shift $((OPTIND - 1)) | |
# $# should be at least 1 (the command to execute), however it may be strictly | |
# greater than 1 if the command itself has options. | |
if (($# == 0 || interval <= 0)); then | |
printUsage | |
exit 1 | |
fi | |
# kill -0 pid Exit code indicates if a signal may be sent to $pid process. | |
( | |
((t = timeout)) | |
while ((t > 0)); do | |
sleep $interval | |
kill -0 $$ || exit 0 | |
((t -= interval)) | |
done | |
# Be nice, post SIGTERM first. | |
# The 'exit 0' below will be executed if any preceeding command fails. | |
kill -s SIGTERM $$ && kill -0 $$ || exit 0 | |
sleep $delay | |
kill -s SIGKILL $$ | |
) 2> /dev/null & | |
exec "$@" |
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