Linux/Unix 命令来确定进程是否正在运行?

我需要一个独立于平台的(Linux/Unix | OSX) shell/bash 命令来确定某个特定进程是否正在运行。 最简单的方法/命令是什么?

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On most Linux distributions, you can use pidof(8).

It will print the process ids of all running instances of specified processes, or nothing if there are no instances running.

For instance, on my system (I have four instances of bashand one instance of remmina running):

$ pidof bash remmina
6148 6147 6144 5603 21598

On other Unices, pgrep or a combination of ps and grep will achieve the same thing, as others have rightfully pointed out.

I use pgrep -l httpd but not sure it is present on any platform...
Who can confirm on OSX?

This should work on most flavours of Unix, BSD and Linux:

PATH=/usr/ucb:${PATH} ps aux | grep httpd | grep -v grep

Tested on:

  • SunOS 5.10 [Hence the PATH=...]
  • Linux 2.6.32 (CentOS)
  • Linux 3.0.0 (Ubuntu)
  • Darwin 11.2.0
  • FreeBSD 9.0-STABLE
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux ES release 4
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5

While pidof and pgrep are great tools for determining what's running, they are both, unfortunately, unavailable on some operating systems. A definite fail safe would be to use the following: ps cax | grep command

The output on Gentoo Linux:

14484 ?        S      0:00 apache2
14667 ?        S      0:00 apache2
19620 ?        Sl     0:00 apache2
21132 ?        Ss     0:04 apache2

The output on OS X:

42582   ??  Z      0:00.00 (smbclient)
46529   ??  Z      0:00.00 (smbclient)
46539   ??  Z      0:00.00 (smbclient)
46547   ??  Z      0:00.00 (smbclient)
46586   ??  Z      0:00.00 (smbclient)
46594   ??  Z      0:00.00 (smbclient)

On both Linux and OS X, grep returns an exit code so it's easy to check if the process was found or not:

#!/bin/bash
ps cax | grep httpd > /dev/null
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "Process is running."
else
echo "Process is not running."
fi

Furthermore, if you would like the list of PIDs, you could easily grep for those as well:

ps cax | grep httpd | grep -o '^[ ]*[0-9]*'

Whose output is the same on Linux and OS X:

3519 3521 3523 3524

The output of the following is an empty string, making this approach safe for processes that are not running:

echo ps cax | grep aasdfasdf | grep -o '^[ ]*[0-9]*'

This approach is suitable for writing a simple empty string test, then even iterating through the discovered PIDs.

#!/bin/bash
PROCESS=$1
PIDS=`ps cax | grep $PROCESS | grep -o '^[ ]*[0-9]*'`
if [ -z "$PIDS" ]; then
echo "Process not running." 1>&2
exit 1
else
for PID in $PIDS; do
echo $PID
done
fi

You can test it by saving it to a file (named "running") with execute permissions (chmod +x running) and executing it with a parameter: ./running "httpd"

#!/bin/bash
ps cax | grep httpd
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "Process is running."
else
echo "Process is not running."
fi

WARNING!!!

Please keep in mind that you're simply parsing the output of ps ax which means that, as seen in the Linux output, it is not simply matching on processes, but also the arguments passed to that program. I highly recommend being as specific as possible when using this method (e.g. ./running "mysql" will also match 'mysqld' processes). I highly recommend using which to check against a full path where possible.


References:

http://linux.about.com/od/commands/l/blcmdl1_ps.htm

http://linux.about.com/od/commands/l/blcmdl1_grep.htm

Just a minor addition: if you add the -c flag to ps, you don't need to remove the line containing the grep process with grep -v afterwards. I.e.

ps acux | grep cron

is all the typing you'll need on a bsd-ish system (this includes MacOSX) You can leave the -u away if you need less information.

On a system where the genetics of the native ps command point back to SysV, you'd use

ps -e |grep cron

or

ps -el |grep cron

for a listing containing more than just pid and process name. Of course you could select the specific fields to print out using the -o <field,field,...> option.

The simpliest way is to use ps and grep:

command="httpd"
running=`ps ax | grep -v grep | grep $command | wc -l`
if [ running -gt 0 ]; then
echo "Command is running"
else
echo "Command is not running"
fi

If your command has some command arguments, then you can also put more 'grep cmd_arg1' after 'grep $command' to filter out other possible processes that you are not interested in.

Example: show me if any java process with supplied argument:

-Djava.util.logging.config.file=logging.properties

is running

ps ax | grep -v grep | grep java | grep java.util.logging.config.file=logging.properties | wc -l

You SHOULD know the PID !

Finding a process by trying to do some kind of pattern recognition on the process arguments (like pgrep "mysqld") is a strategy that is doomed to fail sooner or later. What if you have two mysqld running? Forget that approach. You MAY get it right temporarily and it MAY work for a year or two but then something happens that you haven't thought about.

Only the process id (pid) is truly unique.

Always store the pid when you launch something in the background. In Bash this can be done with the $! Bash variable. You will save yourself SO much trouble by doing so.

How to determine if process is running (by pid)

So now the question becomes how to know if a pid is running.

Simply do:

ps -o pid= -p <pid>

This is POSIX and hence portable. It will return the pid itself if the process is running or return nothing if the process is not running. Strictly speaking the command will return a single column, the pid, but since we've given that an empty title header (the stuff immediately preceding the equals sign) and this is the only column requested then the ps command will not use header at all. Which is what we want because it makes parsing easier.

This will work on Linux, BSD, Solaris, etc.

Another strategy would be to test on the exit value from the above ps command. It should be zero if the process is running and non-zero if it isn't. The POSIX spec says that ps must exit >0 if an error has occurred but it is unclear to me what constitutes 'an error'. Therefore I'm not personally using that strategy although I'm pretty sure it will work as well on all Unix/Linux platforms.

This approach can be used in case commands 'ps', 'pidof' and rest are not available. I personally use procfs very frequently in my tools/scripts/programs.

   egrep -m1  "mysqld$|httpd$" /proc/[0-9]*/status | cut -d'/' -f3

Little explanation what is going on:

  1. -m1 - stop process on first match
  2. "mysqld$|httpd$" - grep will match lines which ended on mysqld OR httpd
  3. /proc/[0-9]* - bash will match line which started with any number
  4. cut - just split the output by delimiter '/' and extract field 3

The following shell function, being only based on POSIX standard commands and options should work on most (if not any) Unix and linux system. :

isPidRunning() {
cmd=`
PATH=\`getconf PATH\` export PATH
ps -e -o pid= -o comm= |
awk '$2 ~ "^.*/'"$1"'$" || $2 ~ "^'"$1"'$" {print $1,$2}'
`
[ -n "$cmd" ] &&
printf "%s is running\n%s\n\n" "$1" "$cmd" ||
printf "%s is not running\n\n" $1
[ -n "$cmd" ]
}

$ isPidRunning httpd
httpd is running
586 /usr/apache/bin/httpd
588 /usr/apache/bin/httpd


$ isPidRunning ksh
ksh is running
5230 ksh


$ isPidRunning bash
bash is not running

Note that it will choke when passed the dubious "0]" command name and will also fail to identify processes having an embedded space in their names.

Note too that the most upvoted and accepted solution demands non portable ps options and gratuitously uses a shell that is, despite its popularity, not guaranteed to be present on every Unix/Linux machine (bash)

Putting the various suggestions together, the cleanest version I was able to come up with (without unreliable grep which triggers parts of words) is:

kill -0 $(pidof mysql) 2> /dev/null || echo "Mysql ain't runnin' message/actions"

kill -0 doesn't kill the process but checks if it exists and then returns true, if you don't have pidof on your system, store the pid when you launch the process:

$ mysql &
$ echo $! > pid_stored

then in the script:

kill -0 $(cat pid_stored) 2> /dev/null || echo "Mysql ain't runnin' message/actions"

This prints the number of processes whose basename is "chromium-browser":

ps -e -o args= | awk 'BEGIN{c=0}{
if(!match($1,/^\[.*\]$/)){sub(".*/","",$1)} # Do not strip process names enclosed by square brackets.
if($1==cmd){c++}
}END{print c}' cmd="chromium-browser"

If this prints "0", the process is not running. The command assumes process path does not contain breaking space. I have not tested this with suspended processes or zombie processes.

Tested using gwak as the awk alternative in Linux.

Here is a more versatile solution with some example usage:

#!/bin/sh
isProcessRunning() {
if [ "${1-}" = "-q" ]; then
local quiet=1;
shift
else
local quiet=0;
fi
ps -e -o pid,args= | awk 'BEGIN{status=1}{
name=$2
if(name !~ /^\[.*\]$/){sub(".*/","",name)} # strip dirname, if process name is not enclosed by square brackets.
if(name==cmd){status=0; if(q){exit}else{print $0}}
}END{exit status}' cmd="$1" q=$quiet
}


process='chromium-browser'


printf "Process \"${process}\" is "
if isProcessRunning -q "$process"
then printf "running.\n"
else printf "not running.\n"; fi


printf "Listing of matching processes (PID and process name with command line arguments):\n"
isProcessRunning "$process"

You should know the PID of your process.

When you launch it, its PID will be recorded in the $! variable. Save this PID into a file.

Then you will need to check if this PID corresponds to a running process. Here's a complete skeleton script:

FILE="/tmp/myapp.pid"


if [ -f $FILE ];
then
PID=$(cat $FILE)
else
PID=1
fi


ps -o pid= -p $PID
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "Process already running."
else
echo "Starting process."
run_my_app &
echo $! > $FILE
fi

Based on the answer of peterh. The trick for knowing if a given PID is running is in the ps -o pid= -p $PID instruction.

Here is my version. Features:

  • checks for exact program name (first argument of the function). search for "mysql" will not match running "mysqld"
  • searches program arguments (second argument of the function)

script:

#!/bin/bash


# $1 - cmd
# $2 - args
# return: 0 - no error, running; 1 - error, not running
function isRunning() {
for i in $(pidof $1); do
cat /proc/$i/cmdline | tr '\000' ' ' | grep -F -e "$2" 1>&2> /dev/null
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
return 0
fi
done
return 1
}


isRunning java "-Djava.util.logging.config.file=logging.properties"
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "not running, starting..."
fi

None of the answers worked for me, so heres mine:

process="$(pidof YOURPROCESSHERE|tr -d '\n')"
if [[ -z "${process// }" ]]; then
echo "Process is not running."
else
echo "Process is running."
fi

Explanation:

|tr -d '\n'

This removes the carriage return created by the terminal. The rest can be explained by this post.

[ $pid ] && [ -d /proc/$pid ] && command if you know the pid