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Home/ Questions/Q 375095
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T14:28:09+00:00 2026-05-12T14:28:09+00:00

I have a bash script I want to run every 5 minutes from cron…

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I have a bash script I want to run every 5 minutes from cron… but there’s a chance the previous run of the script isn’t done yet… in this case, i want the new run to just exit. I don’t want to rely on just a lock file in /tmp.. I want to make sure sure the process is actually running before i honor the lock file (or whatever)…

Here is what I have stolen from the internet so far… how do i smarten it up a bit? or is there a completely different way that’s better?

if [ -f /tmp/mylockFile ] ; then
  echo 'Script is still running'
else
  echo 1 > /tmp/mylockFile
  /* Do some stuff */
  rm -f /tmp/mylockFile
fi
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T14:28:10+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 2:28 pm
    # Use a lockfile containing the pid of the running process
    # If script crashes and leaves lockfile around, it will have a different pid so
    # will not prevent script running again.
    # 
    lf=/tmp/pidLockFile
    # create empty lock file if none exists
    cat /dev/null >> $lf
    read lastPID < $lf
    # if lastPID is not null and a process with that pid exists , exit
    [ ! -z "$lastPID" -a -d /proc/$lastPID ] && exit
    echo not running
    # save my pid in the lock file
    echo $$ > $lf
    # sleep just to make testing easier
    sleep 5
    

    There is at least one race condition in this script. Don’t use it for a life support system, lol. But it should work fine for your example, because your environment doesn’t start two scripts simultaneously. There are lots of ways to use more atomic locks, but they generally depend on having a particular thing optionally installed, or work differently on NFS, etc…

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