I have a method in my process that should be run only if the process is not in background. How can I dynamically test if the current process is in background ? Thanks
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Here is what I use, for a program launched from a shell with job control (most of the shell, see below):
If a session has a controlling terminal, there can be only process group in the foreground, and tcget/setpgrp is used for setting this process group id. So if your process group Id is not the process group Id of the foreground process group, then you are not in foreground.
It works if the shell has job control, as the link pointed by mouviciel says. However, it is not always the case. For example, on embedded system using busybox, the shell can be configured with or without job control.
Try to check availability of DISPLAY. There shown source code of xset command How to check if Linux console screensaver has blanked screen
Check out Unix FAQ: How can a process detect if it's running in the background?
General answer is: You can't tell if you're running in the background.
But you can check if stdin is a terminal:
if(isatty(0)) { ... }
This sounds like a bad design. Can you tell us something about this method you're mentioning in your question? As mouviciel said, there's no reliable way.
One suggestion I have is to use the "foreground behaviour" by default and keep the "background behaviour" under a switch like
-d
(for daemon mode) or vice versa if your program usually runs in the background. One example of such usage is fetchmail.