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wait [pid]...
wait [pid]...
wait [% jobid...]
wait
wait [job...]
Not all the processes of a pipeline with three or more stages are children of the shell, and thus cannot be waited for.
Wait for your background process whose process ID is pid and report its termination status. If pid is omitted, all your shell's currently active background processes are waited for and the return code is 0. The wait utility accepts a job identifier, when Job Control is enabled (jsh), and the argument, jobid, is preceded by a percent sign (%).If pid is not an active process ID, the wait utility returns immediately and the return code is 0.
If the wait utility is invoked with no operands, it waits until all process IDs known to the invoking shell have terminated and exit with an exit status of 0.
If one or more pid or jobid operands are specified that represent known process IDs (or jobids), the wait utility waits until all of them have terminated. If one or more pid or jobid operands are specified that represent unknown process IDs (or jobids), wait treats them as if they were known process IDs (or jobids) that exited with exit status 127. The exit status returned by the wait utility is the exit status of the process requested by the last pid or jobid operand.
The known process IDs are applicable only for invocations of wait in the current shell execution environment.
number refers to a process ID.
number refers to a process group ID.
number refers to a job number
Refers to a job whose name begins with string
Refers to a job whose name contains string
%%
Refers to the current job
Refers to the previous job
If one or more job operands is a process id or process group id not known by the current shell environment, wait treats each of them as if it were a process that exited with status 127.
The unsigned decimal integer process ID of a command, for which the utility is to wait for the termination.
A job control job ID that identifies a background process group to be waited for. The job control job ID notation is applicable only for invocations of wait in the current shell execution environment, and only on systems supporting the job control option.
(wait) nohup wait ... find . -exec wait ... \e;
it returns immediately because there is no known process IDs to wait for in those environments.
Although the exact value used when a process is terminated by a signal is unspecified, if it is known that a signal terminated a process, a script can still reliably figure out which signal is using kill, as shown by the following (/bin/ksh and /usr/xpg4/bin/sh):
sleep 1000& pid=$! kill -kill $pid wait $pid echo $pid was terminated by a SIG$(kill -l $(($?-128))) signal.
Example 2 Returning The Exit Status Of A Process
If the following sequence of commands is run in less than 31 seconds (/bin/ksh and /usr/xpg4/bin/sh):
sleep 257 | sleep 31 & jobs -l %%
then either of the following commands returns the exit status of the second sleep in the pipeline:
wait <pid of sleep 31>
wait %%
wait was invoked with no operands. All processes known by the invoking process have terminated.
job is a process id or process group id that is unknown to the current shell environment.
ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
Interface Stability Committed |
Standard See standards(7). |