In a C program I can writ开发者_如何转开发e argv[0] and the new name shows up in a ps listing.
How can I do this in bash?
You can do it when running a new program via exec -a <newname>
.
Just for the record, even though it does not exactly answer the original poster's question, this is something trivial to do with zsh
:
ARGV0=emacs nethack
I've had a chance to go through the source for bash and it does not look like there is any support for writing to argv[0].
I'm assuming you've got a shell script that you wish to execute such that the script process itself has a new argv[0]
. For example (I've only tested this in bash, so i'm using that, but this may work elsewhere).
#!/bin/bash
echo "process $$ here, first arg was $1"
ps -p $$
The output will be something like this:
$ ./script arg1
process 70637 here, first arg was arg1
PID TTY TIME CMD
70637 ttys003 0:00.00 /bin/bash ./script arg1
So ps
shows the shell, /bin/bash
in this case. Now try your interactive shell's exec -a
, but in a subshell so you don't blow away the interactive shell:
$ (exec -a MyScript ./script arg1)
process 70936 here, first arg was arg1
PID TTY TIME CMD
70936 ttys008 0:00.00 /bin/bash /path/to/script arg1
Woops, still showing /bin/bash
. what happened? The exec -a
probably did set argv[0]
, but then a new instance of bash started because the operating system read #!/bin/bash
at the top of your script. Ok, what if we perform the exec'ing inside the script somehow? First, we need some way of detecting whether this is the "first" execution of the script, or the second, exec
ed instance, otherwise the second instance will exec again, and on and on in an infinite loop. Next, we need the executable to not be a file with a #!/bin/bash
line at the top, to prevent the OS from changing our desired argv[0]. Here's my attempt:
$ cat ./script
#!/bin/bash
__second_instance="__second_instance_$$"
[[ -z ${!__second_instance} ]] && {
declare -x "__second_instance_$$=true"
exec -a MyScript "$SHELL" "$0" "$@"
}
echo "process $$ here, first arg was $1"
ps -p $$
Thanks to this answer, I first test for the environment variable __second_instance_$$
, based on the PID (which does not change through exec
) so that it won't collide with other scripts using this technique. If it's empty, I assume this is the first instance, and I export that environment variable, then exec. But, importantly, I do not exec this script, but I exec the shell binary directly, with this script ($0
) as an argument, passing along all the other arguments as well ($@
). The environment variable is a bit of a hack.
Now the output is this:
$ ./script arg1
process 71143 here, first arg was arg1
PID TTY TIME CMD
71143 ttys008 0:00.01 MyScript ./script arg1
That's almost there. The argv[0]
is MyScript
like I want, but there's that extra arg ./script
in there which is a consequence of executing the shell directly (rather than via the OS's #!
processing). Unfortunately, I don't know how to get any better than this.
Update for Bash 5.0
Looks like Bash 5.0 adds support for writing to special variable BASH_ARGV0, so this should become far simpler to accomplish.
(see release announcement)
( exec -a foo bash -c 'echo $0' )
ps
and others inspect two things, none of which is argv0: /proc/PID/comm
(for the "process name") and /proc/PID/cmdline
(for the command-line). Assigning to argv0 will not change what ps
shows in the CMD
column, but it will change what the process usually sees as its own name (in output messages, for example).
To change the CMD
column, write to /proc/PID/comm
:
echo -n mynewname >/proc/$$/comm; ps
You cannot write to or modify /proc/PID/cmdline
in any way.
Process can set their own "title" by writing to the memory area in which argv
& envp
are located (note that this is different than setting BASH_ARGV0
). This has the side effect of changing /proc/PID/cmdline
as well, which is what some daemons do in order to prettify (hide?) their command lines. libbsd's setproctitle()
does exactly that, but you cannot do that in Bash without support of external tools.
I will just add that this must be possible at runtime, at least in some environments. Assigning $0 in perl on linux does change what shows up in ps. I do not know how that is implemented, however. If I can find out, i'll update this.
edit: Based on how perl does it, it is non-trivial. I doubt there is any bask built in way at runtime but don't know for sure. You can see how perl does sets the process name at runtime.
Copy the bash executable to a different name.
You can do this in the script itself...
cp /bin/bash ./new-name
PATH=$PATH:.
exec new-name $0
If you are trying to pretend you are not a shell script you can rename the script itself to something cool or even " " (a single space) so
exec new-name " "
Will execute bash your script and appears in the ps list as just new-name
.
OK so calling a script " " is a very bad idea :)
Basically, to change the name
bash script
rename bash and rename the script.
If you are worried, as Mr McDoom. apparently is, about copying a binary to a new name (which is entirely safe) you could also create a symlink
ln -s /bin/bash ./MyFunkyName
./MyFunkyName
This way, the symlink is what appears in the ps list. (again use PATH=$PATH:. if you dont want the ./)
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