Wait (command)

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In computing, wait is a command which pauses until execution of a background process has ended.

Contents

Usage

wait [n]

where n is the pid or job ID of a currently executing background process (job). If n is not given, the command waits until all jobs known to the invoking shell have terminated.

wait normally returns the exit status of the last job which terminated. It may also return 127 in the event that n specifies a non-existent job or zero if there were no jobs to wait for.

Because wait needs to be aware of the job table of the current shell execution environment, it is usually implemented as a shell builtin.

Example

This command can be useful where part of a script can execute in parallel to implement a barrier where an upcoming section depends on the successful completion of the preceding sections.

The following (somewhat contrived) example will fetch the src/ directory from a machine named iona using rsync and simultaneously update the libraries on which this program depends, before building the combination.

#!/bin/bash
 
# Parallel update script which makes use of the wait command
 
# Update local copy
rsync iona:src/ . &
# Upgrade required libraries, or exit indicating failure if make failed for some reason
make -C lib || exit 1
 
# Wait for rsync to terminate (may have already happened) and finish the job, unless rsync failed
wait && make

See also

External links

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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