Issue
I have a long running BASH script that I am running under CYGWIN on Windows.
I would like to limit the script to run for 30 seconds, and automatically terminate if it exceeds this limit. Ideally, I'd like to be able to do this to any command.
For example:
$ limittime -t 30 'myscript.sh'
or
$ limittime -t 30 'grep func *.c'
Under cygwin the ulimit command doesn't seem to work.
Solution
See the http://www.pixelbeat.org/scripts/timeout script the functionality of which has been integrated into newer coreutils:
#!/bin/sh
# Execute a command with a timeout
# License: LGPLv2
# Author:
# http://www.pixelbeat.org/
# Notes:
# Note there is a timeout command packaged with coreutils since v7.0
# If the timeout occurs the exit status is 124.
# There is an asynchronous (and buggy) equivalent of this
# script packaged with bash (under /usr/share/doc/ in my distro),
# which I only noticed after writing this.
# I noticed later again that there is a C equivalent of this packaged
# with satan by Wietse Venema, and copied to forensics by Dan Farmer.
# Changes:
# V1.0, Nov 3 2006, Initial release
# V1.1, Nov 20 2007, Brad Greenlee <[email protected]>
# Make more portable by using the 'CHLD'
# signal spec rather than 17.
# V1.3, Oct 29 2009, Ján Sáreník <[email protected]>
# Even though this runs under dash,ksh etc.
# it doesn't actually timeout. So enforce bash for now.
# Also change exit on timeout from 128 to 124
# to match coreutils.
# V2.0, Oct 30 2009, Ján Sáreník <[email protected]>
# Rewritten to cover compatibility with other
# Bourne shell implementations (pdksh, dash)
if [ "$#" -lt "2" ]; then
echo "Usage: `basename $0` timeout_in_seconds command" >&2
echo "Example: `basename $0` 2 sleep 3 || echo timeout" >&2
exit 1
fi
cleanup()
{
trap - ALRM #reset handler to default
kill -ALRM $a 2>/dev/null #stop timer subshell if running
kill $! 2>/dev/null && #kill last job
exit 124 #exit with 124 if it was running
}
watchit()
{
trap "cleanup" ALRM
sleep $1& wait
kill -ALRM $$
}
watchit $1& a=$! #start the timeout
shift #first param was timeout for sleep
trap "cleanup" ALRM INT #cleanup after timeout
"$@"& wait $!; RET=$? #start the job wait for it and save its return value
kill -ALRM $a #send ALRM signal to watchit
wait $a #wait for watchit to finish cleanup
exit $RET #return the value
Answered By - pixelbeat Answer Checked By - Candace Johnson (WPSolving Volunteer)