perlquestion
fletcher_the_dog
I have a script that launches an application and then monitors to see if the application is has been closed. Here is a greatly simplified version:
<CODE>
use strict;
my $pid = fork();
if (!$pid) {
print "I am the child process\n";
system "emacs"; # this is just an example I am not really launching emacs
print "Child process should end now\n";
exit 0;
}
else {
print "I am the parent of $pid\n";
while (kill 0,$pid) {
print "My child is still alive\n";
sleep(3); # wait a little bit
}
print "Parent process done\n";
}
__OUTPUT__
$ perl script.pl
I am the child process
I am the parent of 1324
My child is still alive
My child is still alive
My child is still alive
Child process should end now
My child is still alive
My child is still alive
etc.
</CODE>
The problem is that even after the child process is dead the parent process keeps going. According to the documentation for kill:
<BR><BR><i>
If SIGNAL is zero, no signal is sent to the process. This is a useful way to check that the process is alive and hasn't
changed its UID. See perlport for notes on the portability of
this construct.
</i><BR><BR>
So I thought "kill" would be a good way to see if the process was still going, but it doesn't appear to work. What am I missing? Is there a better way to do this?