Bring the current Python program to background

前端 未结 2 1490
野的像风
野的像风 2021-02-01 18:21

A python script prints information to screen and then should go to background.

How to do that from within the script itself?

相关标签:
2条回答
  • 2021-02-01 19:24

    Copying related code from Creating a daemon the Python way; please read the comments as to why that code is quite thought-out.

    def createDaemon():
       """Detach a process from the controlling terminal and run it in the
       background as a daemon.
       """
    
       try:
          # Fork a child process so the parent can exit.  This returns control to
          # the command-line or shell.  It also guarantees that the child will not
          # be a process group leader, since the child receives a new process ID
          # and inherits the parent's process group ID.  This step is required
          # to insure that the next call to os.setsid is successful.
          pid = os.fork()
       except OSError, e:
          raise Exception, "%s [%d]" % (e.strerror, e.errno)
    
       if (pid == 0):   # The first child.
          # To become the session leader of this new session and the process group
          # leader of the new process group, we call os.setsid().  The process is
          # also guaranteed not to have a controlling terminal.
          os.setsid()
    
          # Is ignoring SIGHUP necessary?
          #
          # It's often suggested that the SIGHUP signal should be ignored before
          # the second fork to avoid premature termination of the process.  The
          # reason is that when the first child terminates, all processes, e.g.
          # the second child, in the orphaned group will be sent a SIGHUP.
          #
          # "However, as part of the session management system, there are exactly
          # two cases where SIGHUP is sent on the death of a process:
          #
          #   1) When the process that dies is the session leader of a session that
          #      is attached to a terminal device, SIGHUP is sent to all processes
          #      in the foreground process group of that terminal device.
          #   2) When the death of a process causes a process group to become
          #      orphaned, and one or more processes in the orphaned group are
          #      stopped, then SIGHUP and SIGCONT are sent to all members of the
          #      orphaned group." [2]
          #
          # The first case can be ignored since the child is guaranteed not to have
          # a controlling terminal.  The second case isn't so easy to dismiss.
          # The process group is orphaned when the first child terminates and
          # POSIX.1 requires that every STOPPED process in an orphaned process
          # group be sent a SIGHUP signal followed by a SIGCONT signal.  Since the
          # second child is not STOPPED though, we can safely forego ignoring the
          # SIGHUP signal.  In any case, there are no ill-effects if it is ignored.
          #
          # import signal           # Set handlers for asynchronous events.
          # signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, signal.SIG_IGN)
    
          try:
             # Fork a second child and exit immediately to prevent zombies.  This
             # causes the second child process to be orphaned, making the init
             # process responsible for its cleanup.  And, since the first child is
             # a session leader without a controlling terminal, it's possible for
             # it to acquire one by opening a terminal in the future (System V-
             # based systems).  This second fork guarantees that the child is no
             # longer a session leader, preventing the daemon from ever acquiring
             # a controlling terminal.
             pid = os.fork()    # Fork a second child.
          except OSError, e:
             raise Exception, "%s [%d]" % (e.strerror, e.errno)
    
          if (pid == 0):    # The second child.
             # Since the current working directory may be a mounted filesystem, we
             # avoid the issue of not being able to unmount the filesystem at
             # shutdown time by changing it to the root directory.
             os.chdir(WORKDIR)
             # We probably don't want the file mode creation mask inherited from
             # the parent, so we give the child complete control over permissions.
             os.umask(UMASK)
          else:
             # exit() or _exit()?  See below.
             os._exit(0)    # Exit parent (the first child) of the second child.
       else:
          # exit() or _exit()?
          # _exit is like exit(), but it doesn't call any functions registered
          # with atexit (and on_exit) or any registered signal handlers.  It also
          # closes any open file descriptors.  Using exit() may cause all stdio
          # streams to be flushed twice and any temporary files may be unexpectedly
          # removed.  It's therefore recommended that child branches of a fork()
          # and the parent branch(es) of a daemon use _exit().
          os._exit(0)   # Exit parent of the first child.
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-02-01 19:26

    Update: To properly daemonize your process, use daemonize.

    Original answer: Since the shell is waiting for your process to finish, the main process must terminate. You can use os.fork() to fork off a child process and sys.exit() from the parent process:

    import os
    import sys
    
    if os.fork():
        sys.exit()
    # Child code goes here
    
    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题