Timeout a command in bash without unnecessary delay
Solution 1:
You are probably looking for the timeout
command in coreutils. Since it's a part of coreutils, it is technically a C solution, but it's still coreutils. info timeout
for more details.
Here's an example:
timeout 5 /path/to/slow/command with options
Solution 2:
I think this is precisely what you are asking for:
http://www.bashcookbook.com/bashinfo/source/bash-4.0/examples/scripts/timeout3
#!/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 "$@"
Solution 3:
This solution works regardless of bash monitor mode. You can use the proper signal to terminate your_command
#!/bin/sh
( your_command ) & pid=$!
( sleep $TIMEOUT && kill -HUP $pid ) 2>/dev/null & watcher=$!
wait $pid 2>/dev/null && pkill -HUP -P $watcher
The watcher kills your_command after given timeout; the script waits for the slow task and terminates the watcher. Note that wait
does not work with processes which are children of a different shell.
Examples:
- your_command runs more than 2 seconds and was terminated
your_command interrupted
( sleep 20 ) & pid=$!
( sleep 2 && kill -HUP $pid ) 2>/dev/null & watcher=$!
if wait $pid 2>/dev/null; then
echo "your_command finished"
pkill -HUP -P $watcher
wait $watcher
else
echo "your_command interrupted"
fi
- your_command finished before the timeout (20 seconds)
your_command finished
( sleep 2 ) & pid=$!
( sleep 20 && kill -HUP $pid ) 2>/dev/null & watcher=$!
if wait $pid 2>/dev/null; then
echo "your_command finished"
pkill -HUP -P $watcher
wait $watcher
else
echo "your_command interrupted"
fi