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- Sleeping in a batch file 30 answers
How do I get a Windows batch script to wait a few seconds?
sleep
and wait
don't seem to work (unrecognized command).
This question already has an answer here:
How do I get a Windows batch script to wait a few seconds?
sleep
and wait
don't seem to work (unrecognized command).
You can try
ping -n XXX 127.0.0.1 >nul
where XXX is the number of seconds to wait, plus one.
I don't know why those commands are not working for you, but you can also try timeout
timeout <delay in seconds>
timeout /t 10 /nobreak > NUL
/t
specifies the time to wait in seconds
/nobreak
won't interrupt the timeout if you press a key (except CTRL-C)
> NUL
will suppress the output of the command
To wait 10 seconds:
choice /T 10 /C X /D X /N
Microsoft has a sleep function you can call directly.
Usage: sleep time-to-sleep-in-seconds
sleep [-m] time-to-sleep-in-milliseconds
sleep [-c] commited-memory ratio (1%-100%)
You can just say sleep 1 for example to sleep for 1 second in your batch script.
IMO Ping is a bit of a hack for this use case.
For a pure cmd.exe script, you can use this piece of code that returns the current time in hundreths of seconds.
:gettime
set hh=%time:~0,2%
set mm=%time:~3,2%
set ss=%time:~6,2%
set cc=%time:~-2%
set /A %1=hh*360000+mm*6000+ss*100+cc
goto :eof
You may then use it in a wait loop like this.
:wait
call :gettime wait0
:w2
call :gettime wait1
set /A waitt = wait1-wait0
if !waitt! lss %1 goto :w2
goto :eof
And putting all pieces together:
@echo off
setlocal enableextensions enabledelayedexpansion
call :gettime t1
echo %t1%
call :wait %1
call :gettime t2
echo %t2%
set /A tt = (t2-t1)/100
echo %tt%
goto :eof
:wait
call :gettime wait0
:w2
call :gettime wait1
set /A waitt = wait1-wait0
if !waitt! lss %1 goto :w2
goto :eof
:gettime
set hh=%time:~0,2%
set mm=%time:~3,2%
set ss=%time:~6,2%
set cc=%time:~-2%
set /A %1=hh*360000+mm*6000+ss*100+cc
goto :eof
For a more detailed description of the commands used here, check HELP SET
and HELP CALL
information.
The Windows 2003 Resource Kit has a sleep
batch file. If you ever move up to PowerShell, you can use:
Start-Sleep -s <time to sleep>
Or something like that.
I rely on JScript. I have a JScript file like this:
// This is sleep.js
WScript.Sleep( WScript.Arguments( 0 ) );
And inside a batch file I run it with CScript (usually it is %SystemRoot%\system32\cscript.exe
)
rem This is the calling inside a BAT file to wait for 5 seconds
cscript /nologo sleep.js 5000
Heh, Windows is uhm... interesting. This works:
choice /T 1 /d y > NUL
choice
presents a prompt asking you yes or no. /d y
makes it choose yes. /t 1
makes it wait a second before typing it. > NUL
squashes output.
I just wrote my own sleep which called the Win32 Sleep API function.
RJLsoftware has a small utility called DelayExec.exe. With this you can execute a delayed start of any program in batches and Windows registry (most useful in ...Windows/.../Run registry).
Usage example:
delayexec "C:\WINDOWS\system32\notepad.exe" 10
or as a sleep command:
delayexec "nothing" 10
Personally I use a Perl one-liner:
perl -e "sleep 10;"
for a 10-second wait. Chances are you'll already have Perl installed on a development machine as part of your git installation; if not you will have to install it, for example, from ActiveState or Strawberry, but it's one of those things I install anyway.
Alternatively, you can install a sleep command from GnuWin32.