Quick-and-dirty way to ensure only one instance of a shell script is running at a time

raldi picture raldi · Oct 9, 2008 · Viewed 110.8k times · Source

What's a quick-and-dirty way to make sure that only one instance of a shell script is running at a given time?

Answer

Alex B picture Alex B · Oct 4, 2008

Use flock(1) to make an exclusive scoped lock a on file descriptor. This way you can even synchronize different parts of the script.

#!/bin/bash

(
  # Wait for lock on /var/lock/.myscript.exclusivelock (fd 200) for 10 seconds
  flock -x -w 10 200 || exit 1

  # Do stuff

) 200>/var/lock/.myscript.exclusivelock

This ensures that code between ( and ) is run only by one process at a time and that the process doesn’t wait too long for a lock.

Caveat: this particular command is a part of util-linux. If you run an operating system other than Linux, it may or may not be available.