Following is my script 'Infinite.sh' code, I am running this script in background,Before running this script, i want to kill all previous instances.
But this is killing my curent instance also.
kill -9 `ps ux|grep Infinite.sh|awk -F\ '{print $2}'`
while true;
do
echo -n "SLEEPING FOR 5 SECOND"
date
sleep 5
done
Just eliminate the current process' PID from the list. To do this making just the minimal change to your code:
kill -9 `ps ux | grep Infinite.sh | awk -F\ -v pid=$$ 'pid != $2 {print $2}'`
The option -v pid=$$
sets the awk variable pid
to the value of the current process' process ID. The expression pid != $2 {print $2}
will print a process ID only if it differs from the current process' process ID.
To simplify the code, we could use pgrep
:
kill -9 $(pgrep Infinite.sh | grep -v $$)
As triplee points out in the comments, kill -9
should only be used as a last resort. -9
(SIGKILL) prevents a process from cleaning up after itself, deleting temporary files, etc. Other signals that one may want to try first include -2
(SIGINT), -6
(SIGABRT), or -15
(SIGTERM, which is the default). As for which signals to use, Randal L. Schwartz recommends:
Generally, send 15, and wait a second or two, and if that doesn't
work, send 2, and if that doesn't work, send 1. If that doesn't,
REMOVE THE BINARY because the program is badly behaved!
For more details on why kill -9
should be avoided, see here. For more information on the various Unix signals and their meaning, see wikipedia
Anything can be dangerous. The better solution is to save your PID to a file everytime you run an instance. If a PID file exists and if the PID in that file is a valid and is an active process, kill that process. Save the PID of the current process after.
PID_FILE=/var/run/infinite.pid
# Read saved PID of previous instance.
read PID < "$PID_FILE"
# You may consider other safer signals like TERM, HUP, QUIT, and ABRT.
# Checking may also be optional. You can just send the signal right away.
kill -s 0 "$PID" &>/dev/null && kill -s 9 "$PID" &>/dev/null
# Optionally wait for process to exit.
sleep 2s
# Optionally check it again.
kill -s 0 "$PID" &>/dev/null && { echo "Unable to kill process $PID."; exit; }
# Save PID.
echo "$$" > "$PID_FILE"
Simply check if the pid is the same as the one of the running script.
Something like this could work:
#!/bin/bash
pids=($(pgrep "$(basename "$0")"))
for i in "${pids[@]}"
do
(( $$ != i)) && kill "$i"
done
while :; do sleep 1;done
~