how do you background a ssh process?
I know you can suspend a ssh session with ~^z, but is there also a way to background it so that it continues working while you do something else in the local shell?
Solution 1:
If you're trying to run a process remotely, and you don't care about keeping the ssh session open, you may want to look at using screen
. It will allow you to run your process in the "background", and it will keep running after you logout.
First, ssh
over to the remote box, then from there use screen
and start your process, and you can give your screen
a session name if you want. You won't really notice anything different, but start your process in that session. You can than exit out of the screen
session by using the command Ctrl-a d
. It will look something like this:
user@remotebox:~$ screen -S foobarsession
user@remotebox:~$ startmyprocess
[detached from 4865.foobarsession]
user@remotebox:~$
You can then exit out of your ssh session, and the process will keep running. To reconnect to the screen
session later on, ssh back to the remote box and use screen -r
to reconnect. You can use screen -ls
to list the sessions.
user@remotebox:~$ screen -ls
There is a screen on:
4865.foobarsession (10/05/2012 11:10:57 AM) (Detached)
1 Socket in /var/run/screen/S-user
user@remotebox:~$ screen -r foobarsession
user@remotebox:~$ screen -ls
4865.foobarsession (10/05/2012 11:10:57 AM) (Attached)
1 Socket in /var/run/screen/S-user
user@remotebox:~$
Or, if screen
isn't installed, you could use the nohup
command on the remote box. Wikipedia explains that well:
Nohupping backgrounded jobs is typically used to avoid terminating them when logging
off from a remote SSH session. A different issue that often arises in this situation
is that ssh is refusing to log off ("hangs"), since it refuses to lose any data
from/to the background job(s). This problem can also be overcome by redirecting all
three I/O streams:
nohup ./myprogram > foo.out 2> foo.err < /dev/null &
So you could do something like:
ssh -n -f user@remotebox "sh -c 'cd /foo/bar; nohup ./myprogram > foo.out 2> foo.err < /dev/null &'"
Solution 2:
After ~^z execute bg
and the stopped process will continue to execute in background. Works with all processes not just ssh.
P.S.: With fg
you foreground the backgrounded process again. And just for the record: The ~ is only needed to distinguish whether the suspension should be on the local machine (with ~ --> the ssh client) or on the server (without ~ --> whatever process is currently running in foreground on the server)