Getting a background process ID is easy to do from the prompt by going:
$ my_daemon &
$ echo $!
But what if I want to run it as a different user like:
su - joe -c "/path/to/my_daemon &;"
Now how can I capture the PID of my_daemon?
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Succinctly – with a good deal of difficulty.
You have to arrange for the su’d shell to write the child PID to a file and then pick the output. Given that it will be ‘joe’ creating the file and not ‘dex’, that adds another layer of complexity.
The simplest solution is probably:
The next solution involves using a spare file descriptor – number 3.
If you’re worried about interrupts etc (and you probably should be), then you trap things too:
(The caught signals are HUP, INT, QUIT, PIPE and TERM – plus 0 for shell exit.)
Warning: nice theory – untested code…