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How do I start a process in the background?

by faq_monk (Initiate)
on Oct 08, 1999 at 00:29 UTC ( [id://717]=perlfaq nodetype: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??

Current Perl documentation can be found at perldoc.perl.org.

Here is our local, out-dated (pre-5.6) version:

You could use

    system("cmd &")

or you could use fork as documented in fork, with further examples in the perlipc manpage. Some things to be aware of, if you're on a Unix-like system:

STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR are shared

Both the main process and the backgrounded one (the ``child'' process) share the same STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR filehandles. If both try to access them at once, strange things can happen. You may want to close or reopen these for the child. You can get around this with opening a pipe (see open) but on some systems this means that the child process cannot outlive the parent.

Signals

You'll have to catch the SIGCHLD signal, and possibly SIGPIPE too. SIGCHLD is sent when the backgrounded process finishes. SIGPIPE is sent when you write to a filehandle whose child process has closed (an untrapped SIGPIPE can cause your program to silently die). This is not an issue with system("cmd&").

Zombies

You have to be prepared to ``reap'' the child process when it finishes

    $SIG{CHLD} = sub { wait };

See Signals for other examples of code to do this. Zombies are not an issue with system("prog &").

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