What is difference between wait
and sleep
?
wait
waits for a process to finish; sleep
sleeps for a certain amount of seconds.
wait is a BASH built-in command. From man bash
:
wait [n ...]
Wait for each specified process and return its termination sta-
tus. Each n may be a process ID or a job specification; if a
job spec is given, all processes in that job's pipeline are
waited for. If n is not given, all currently active child pro-
cesses are waited for, and the return status is zero. If n
specifies a non-existent process or job, the return status is
127. Otherwise, the return status is the exit status of the
last process or job waited for.
sleep is not a shell built-in command. It is a utility that delays for a specified amount of time.
The sleep
command may support waiting in various units of time. GNU coreutils 8.4 man sleep
says:
SYNOPSIS
sleep NUMBER[SUFFIX]...
DESCRIPTION
Pause for NUMBER seconds. SUFFIX may be ‘s’ for seconds (the default),
‘m’ for minutes, ‘h’ for hours or ‘d’ for days. Unlike most implemen-
tations that require NUMBER be an integer, here NUMBER may be an arbi-
trary floating point number. Given two or more arguments, pause for
the amount of time specified by the sum of their values.
sleep
just delays the shell for the given amount of seconds.
wait
makes the shell wait for the given job. e.g.:
workhard &
[1] 27408
workharder &
[2] 27409
wait %1 %2
delays the shell until both of the subprocesses have finished
Bash
wait command stop script execution until all jobs running in background have terminated or until the job number or process id specified as an option terminates
wait%1 or wait $PID
wait ${!}
wait ${!} means "to wait till the last background process is completed" ($! being the PID of the last background process)
Sleep
add delay for a specified amount of time.
sleep NUMBER[SUFFIX]
sleep 5 (sleep five seconds)
Try this:
sleep 10 &
wait %1
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13296863/difference-between-wait-and-sleep