A separate timer thread will work if you set it up right, I don't understand why it wouldn't. You start 2 threads, which run independent. When the timer reaches the end of it's code block, if a finished flag isn't set, it kills the pid from the other thread. But I don't use windows, and maybe I don't experience it's peculiarities. This works on linux. (Granted it is easier if you have an eventloop system in main).
#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; use threads; use threads::shared; #my $finished:shared = 0; my $timer_go:shared = 0; #my $worker_go:shared = 0; #my $worker_pid:shared = ''; my $worker = threads->create(\&worker); my $timer = threads->create(\&timer,$worker); print "hit enter to start\n"; <>; $timer_go=1; <>; $timer->join(); $worker->join(); sub timer { my $worker = shift; while(1){ if($timer_go){ my $count = 0; while(1){ $count++; if($count > 5){ print "timed out\nHit enter to finish\n"; # Send a signal to a thread $worker->kill('INT'); return; } sleep 1; print "timing $count\n"; } }else{sleep 1} } } sub worker { $|++; $SIG{INT} = sub{ warn "Caught Zap!\n"; sleep 1; exit; }; my $worker_pid = open( READ, "top -d 1 -b |" ); print "\t$worker_pid\n"; return; }

I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth CandyGram for Mongo

In reply to Re^3: break thread with system(...) call by zentara
in thread break thread with system(...) call by aaaone

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