/* timeout -- run a command with bounded time
Copyright (C) 2008-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see . */
/* timeout - Start a command, and kill it if the specified timeout expires
We try to behave like a shell starting a single (foreground) job,
and will kill the job if we receive the alarm signal we setup.
The exit status of the job is returned, or one of these errors:
EXIT_TIMEDOUT 124 job timed out
EXIT_CANCELED 125 internal error
EXIT_CANNOT_INVOKE 126 error executing job
EXIT_ENOENT 127 couldn't find job to exec
Caveats:
If user specifies the KILL (9) signal is to be sent on timeout,
the monitor is killed and so exits with 128+9 rather than 124.
If you start a command in the background, which reads from the tty
and so is immediately sent SIGTTIN to stop, then the timeout
process will ignore this so it can timeout the command as expected.
This can be seen with 'timeout 10 dd&' for example.
However if one brings this group to the foreground with the 'fg'
command before the timer expires, the command will remain
in the stop state as the shell doesn't send a SIGCONT
because the timeout process (group leader) is already running.
To get the command running again one can Ctrl-Z, and do fg again.
Note one can Ctrl-C the whole job when in this state.
I think this could be fixed but I'm not sure the extra
complication is justified for this scenario.
Written by Pádraig Brady. */
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#if HAVE_PRCTL
# include
#endif
#include
#include "system.h"
#include "cl-strtod.h"
#include "xstrtod.h"
#include "sig2str.h"
#include "operand2sig.h"
#include "error.h"
#include "quote.h"
#if HAVE_SETRLIMIT
/* FreeBSD 5.0 at least needs and included
before . Currently "system.h" includes . */
# include
#endif
/* NonStop circa 2011 lacks both SA_RESTART and siginterrupt. */
#ifndef SA_RESTART
# define SA_RESTART 0
#endif
#define PROGRAM_NAME "timeout"
#define AUTHORS proper_name ("Padraig Brady")
static int timed_out;
static int term_signal = SIGTERM; /* same default as kill command. */
static pid_t monitored_pid;
static double kill_after;
static bool foreground; /* whether to use another program group. */
static bool preserve_status; /* whether to use a timeout status or not. */
static bool verbose; /* whether to diagnose timeouts or not. */
static char const *command;
/* for long options with no corresponding short option, use enum */
enum
{
FOREGROUND_OPTION = CHAR_MAX + 1,
PRESERVE_STATUS_OPTION
};
static struct option const long_options[] =
{
{"kill-after", required_argument, NULL, 'k'},
{"signal", required_argument, NULL, 's'},
{"verbose", no_argument, NULL, 'v'},
{"foreground", no_argument, NULL, FOREGROUND_OPTION},
{"preserve-status", no_argument, NULL, PRESERVE_STATUS_OPTION},
{GETOPT_HELP_OPTION_DECL},
{GETOPT_VERSION_OPTION_DECL},
{NULL, 0, NULL, 0}
};
/* Start the timeout after which we'll receive a SIGALRM.
Round DURATION up to the next representable value.
Treat out-of-range values as if they were maximal,
as that's more useful in practice than reporting an error.
'0' means don't timeout. */
static void
settimeout (double duration, bool warn)
{
#if HAVE_TIMER_SETTIME
/* timer_settime() provides potentially nanosecond resolution. */
struct timespec ts = dtotimespec (duration);
struct itimerspec its = { {0, 0}, ts };
timer_t timerid;
if (timer_create (CLOCK_REALTIME, NULL, &timerid) == 0)
{
if (timer_settime (timerid, 0, &its, NULL) == 0)
return;
else
{
if (warn)
error (0, errno, _("warning: timer_settime"));
timer_delete (timerid);
}
}
else if (warn && errno != ENOSYS)
error (0, errno, _("warning: timer_create"));
#elif HAVE_SETITIMER
/* setitimer() is more portable (to Darwin for example),
but only provides microsecond resolution. */
struct timeval tv;
struct timespec ts = dtotimespec (duration);
tv.tv_sec = ts.tv_sec;
tv.tv_usec = (ts.tv_nsec + 999) / 1000;
if (tv.tv_usec == 1000 * 1000)
{
if (tv.tv_sec != TYPE_MAXIMUM (time_t))
{
tv.tv_sec++;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
}
else
tv.tv_usec--;
}
struct itimerval it = { {0, 0}, tv };
if (setitimer (ITIMER_REAL, &it, NULL) == 0)
return;
else
{
if (warn && errno != ENOSYS)
error (0, errno, _("warning: setitimer"));
}
#endif
/* fallback to single second resolution provided by alarm(). */
unsigned int timeint;
if (UINT_MAX <= duration)
timeint = UINT_MAX;
else
{
unsigned int duration_floor = duration;
timeint = duration_floor + (duration_floor < duration);
}
alarm (timeint);
}
/* send SIG avoiding the current process. */
static int
send_sig (pid_t where, int sig)
{
/* If sending to the group, then ignore the signal,
so we don't go into a signal loop. Note that this will ignore any of the
signals registered in install_cleanup(), that are sent after we
propagate the first one, which hopefully won't be an issue. Note this
process can be implicitly multithreaded due to some timer_settime()
implementations, therefore a signal sent to the group, can be sent
multiple times to this process. */
if (where == 0)
signal (sig, SIG_IGN);
return kill (where, sig);
}
/* Signal handler which is required for sigsuspend() to be interrupted
whenever SIGCHLD is received. */
static void
chld (int sig)
{
}
static void
cleanup (int sig)
{
if (sig == SIGALRM)
{
timed_out = 1;
sig = term_signal;
}
if (monitored_pid)
{
if (kill_after)
{
int saved_errno = errno; /* settimeout may reset. */
/* Start a new timeout after which we'll send SIGKILL. */
term_signal = SIGKILL;
settimeout (kill_after, false);
kill_after = 0; /* Don't let later signals reset kill alarm. */
errno = saved_errno;
}
/* Send the signal directly to the monitored child,
in case it has itself become group leader,
or is not running in a separate group. */
if (verbose)
{
char signame[MAX (SIG2STR_MAX, INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (int))];
if (sig2str (sig, signame) != 0)
snprintf (signame, sizeof signame, "%d", sig);
error (0, 0, _("sending signal %s to command %s"),
signame, quote (command));
}
send_sig (monitored_pid, sig);
/* The normal case is the job has remained in our
newly created process group, so send to all processes in that. */
if (!foreground)
{
send_sig (0, sig);
if (sig != SIGKILL && sig != SIGCONT)
{
send_sig (monitored_pid, SIGCONT);
send_sig (0, SIGCONT);
}
}
}
else /* we're the child or the child is not exec'd yet. */
_exit (128 + sig);
}
void
usage (int status)
{
if (status != EXIT_SUCCESS)
emit_try_help ();
else
{
printf (_("\
Usage: %s [OPTION] DURATION COMMAND [ARG]...\n\
or: %s [OPTION]\n"), program_name, program_name);
fputs (_("\
Start COMMAND, and kill it if still running after DURATION.\n\
"), stdout);
emit_mandatory_arg_note ();
fputs (_("\
--preserve-status\n\
exit with the same status as COMMAND, even when the\n\
command times out\n\
--foreground\n\
when not running timeout directly from a shell prompt,\n\
allow COMMAND to read from the TTY and get TTY signals;\n\
in this mode, children of COMMAND will not be timed out\n\
-k, --kill-after=DURATION\n\
also send a KILL signal if COMMAND is still running\n\
this long after the initial signal was sent\n\
-s, --signal=SIGNAL\n\
specify the signal to be sent on timeout;\n\
SIGNAL may be a name like 'HUP' or a number;\n\
see 'kill -l' for a list of signals\n"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-v, --verbose diagnose to stderr any signal sent upon timeout\n"), stdout);
fputs (HELP_OPTION_DESCRIPTION, stdout);
fputs (VERSION_OPTION_DESCRIPTION, stdout);
fputs (_("\n\
DURATION is a floating point number with an optional suffix:\n\
's' for seconds (the default), 'm' for minutes, 'h' for hours or \
'd' for days.\nA duration of 0 disables the associated timeout.\n"), stdout);
fputs (_("\n\
Upon timeout, send the TERM signal to COMMAND, if no other SIGNAL specified.\n\
The TERM signal kills any process that does not block or catch that signal.\n\
It may be necessary to use the KILL signal, since this signal can't be caught.\
\n"), stdout);
fputs (_("\n\
EXIT status:\n\
124 if COMMAND times out, and --preserve-status is not specified\n\
125 if the timeout command itself fails\n\
126 if COMMAND is found but cannot be invoked\n\
127 if COMMAND cannot be found\n\
137 if COMMAND (or timeout itself) is sent the KILL (9) signal (128+9)\n\
- the exit status of COMMAND otherwise\n\
"), stdout);
emit_ancillary_info (PROGRAM_NAME);
}
exit (status);
}
/* Given a floating point value *X, and a suffix character, SUFFIX_CHAR,
scale *X by the multiplier implied by SUFFIX_CHAR. SUFFIX_CHAR may
be the NUL byte or 's' to denote seconds, 'm' for minutes, 'h' for
hours, or 'd' for days. If SUFFIX_CHAR is invalid, don't modify *X
and return false. Otherwise return true. */
static bool
apply_time_suffix (double *x, char suffix_char)
{
int multiplier;
switch (suffix_char)
{
case 0:
case 's':
multiplier = 1;
break;
case 'm':
multiplier = 60;
break;
case 'h':
multiplier = 60 * 60;
break;
case 'd':
multiplier = 60 * 60 * 24;
break;
default:
return false;
}
*x *= multiplier;
return true;
}
static double
parse_duration (char const *str)
{
double duration;
char const *ep;
if (! (xstrtod (str, &ep, &duration, cl_strtod) || errno == ERANGE)
/* Nonnegative interval. */
|| ! (0 <= duration)
/* No extra chars after the number and an optional s,m,h,d char. */
|| (*ep && *(ep + 1))
/* Check any suffix char and update timeout based on the suffix. */
|| !apply_time_suffix (&duration, *ep))
{
error (0, 0, _("invalid time interval %s"), quote (str));
usage (EXIT_CANCELED);
}
return duration;
}
static void
unblock_signal (int sig)
{
sigset_t unblock_set;
sigemptyset (&unblock_set);
sigaddset (&unblock_set, sig);
if (sigprocmask (SIG_UNBLOCK, &unblock_set, NULL) != 0)
error (0, errno, _("warning: sigprocmask"));
}
static void
install_sigchld (void)
{
struct sigaction sa;
sigemptyset (&sa.sa_mask); /* Allow concurrent calls to handler */
sa.sa_handler = chld;
sa.sa_flags = SA_RESTART; /* Restart syscalls if possible, as that's
more likely to work cleanly. */
sigaction (SIGCHLD, &sa, NULL);
/* We inherit the signal mask from our parent process,
so ensure SIGCHLD is not blocked. */
unblock_signal (SIGCHLD);
}
static void
install_cleanup (int sigterm)
{
struct sigaction sa;
sigemptyset (&sa.sa_mask); /* Allow concurrent calls to handler */
sa.sa_handler = cleanup;
sa.sa_flags = SA_RESTART; /* Restart syscalls if possible, as that's
more likely to work cleanly. */
sigaction (SIGALRM, &sa, NULL); /* our timeout. */
sigaction (SIGINT, &sa, NULL); /* Ctrl-C at terminal for example. */
sigaction (SIGQUIT, &sa, NULL); /* Ctrl-\ at terminal for example. */
sigaction (SIGHUP, &sa, NULL); /* terminal closed for example. */
sigaction (SIGTERM, &sa, NULL); /* if we're killed, stop monitored proc. */
sigaction (sigterm, &sa, NULL); /* user specified termination signal. */
}
/* Block all signals which were registered with cleanup() as the signal
handler, so we never kill processes after waitpid() returns.
Also block SIGCHLD to ensure it doesn't fire between
waitpid() polling and sigsuspend() waiting for a signal.
Return original mask in OLD_SET. */
static void
block_cleanup_and_chld (int sigterm, sigset_t *old_set)
{
sigset_t block_set;
sigemptyset (&block_set);
sigaddset (&block_set, SIGALRM);
sigaddset (&block_set, SIGINT);
sigaddset (&block_set, SIGQUIT);
sigaddset (&block_set, SIGHUP);
sigaddset (&block_set, SIGTERM);
sigaddset (&block_set, sigterm);
sigaddset (&block_set, SIGCHLD);
if (sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &block_set, old_set) != 0)
error (0, errno, _("warning: sigprocmask"));
}
/* Try to disable core dumps for this process.
Return TRUE if successful, FALSE otherwise. */
static bool
disable_core_dumps (void)
{
#if HAVE_PRCTL && defined PR_SET_DUMPABLE
if (prctl (PR_SET_DUMPABLE, 0) == 0)
return true;
#elif HAVE_SETRLIMIT && defined RLIMIT_CORE
/* Note this doesn't disable processing by a filter in
/proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern on Linux. */
if (setrlimit (RLIMIT_CORE, &(struct rlimit) {0,0}) == 0)
return true;
#else
return false;
#endif
error (0, errno, _("warning: disabling core dumps failed"));
return false;
}
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
double timeout;
char signame[SIG2STR_MAX];
int c;
initialize_main (&argc, &argv);
set_program_name (argv[0]);
setlocale (LC_ALL, "");
bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR);
textdomain (PACKAGE);
initialize_exit_failure (EXIT_CANCELED);
atexit (close_stdout);
while ((c = getopt_long (argc, argv, "+k:s:v", long_options, NULL)) != -1)
{
switch (c)
{
case 'k':
kill_after = parse_duration (optarg);
break;
case 's':
term_signal = operand2sig (optarg, signame);
if (term_signal == -1)
usage (EXIT_CANCELED);
break;
case 'v':
verbose = true;
break;
case FOREGROUND_OPTION:
foreground = true;
break;
case PRESERVE_STATUS_OPTION:
preserve_status = true;
break;
case_GETOPT_HELP_CHAR;
case_GETOPT_VERSION_CHAR (PROGRAM_NAME, AUTHORS);
default:
usage (EXIT_CANCELED);
break;
}
}
if (argc - optind < 2)
usage (EXIT_CANCELED);
timeout = parse_duration (argv[optind++]);
argv += optind;
command = argv[0];
/* Ensure we're in our own group so all subprocesses can be killed.
Note we don't just put the child in a separate group as
then we would need to worry about foreground and background groups
and propagating signals between them. */
if (!foreground)
setpgid (0, 0);
/* Setup handlers before fork() so that we
handle any signals caused by child, without races. */
install_cleanup (term_signal);
signal (SIGTTIN, SIG_IGN); /* Don't stop if background child needs tty. */
signal (SIGTTOU, SIG_IGN); /* Don't stop if background child needs tty. */
install_sigchld (); /* Interrupt sigsuspend() when child exits. */
monitored_pid = fork ();
if (monitored_pid == -1)
{
error (0, errno, _("fork system call failed"));
return EXIT_CANCELED;
}
else if (monitored_pid == 0)
{ /* child */
/* exec doesn't reset SIG_IGN -> SIG_DFL. */
signal (SIGTTIN, SIG_DFL);
signal (SIGTTOU, SIG_DFL);
execvp (argv[0], argv); /* FIXME: should we use "sh -c" ... here? */
/* exit like sh, env, nohup, ... */
int exit_status = errno == ENOENT ? EXIT_ENOENT : EXIT_CANNOT_INVOKE;
error (0, errno, _("failed to run command %s"), quote (command));
return exit_status;
}
else
{
pid_t wait_result;
int status;
/* We configure timers so that SIGALRM is sent on expiry.
Therefore ensure we don't inherit a mask blocking SIGALRM. */
unblock_signal (SIGALRM);
settimeout (timeout, true);
/* Ensure we don't cleanup() after waitpid() reaps the child,
to avoid sending signals to a possibly different process. */
sigset_t cleanup_set;
block_cleanup_and_chld (term_signal, &cleanup_set);
while ((wait_result = waitpid (monitored_pid, &status, WNOHANG)) == 0)
sigsuspend (&cleanup_set); /* Wait with cleanup signals unblocked. */
if (wait_result < 0)
{
/* shouldn't happen. */
error (0, errno, _("error waiting for command"));
status = EXIT_CANCELED;
}
else
{
if (WIFEXITED (status))
status = WEXITSTATUS (status);
else if (WIFSIGNALED (status))
{
int sig = WTERMSIG (status);
if (WCOREDUMP (status))
error (0, 0, _("the monitored command dumped core"));
if (!timed_out && disable_core_dumps ())
{
/* exit with the signal flag set. */
signal (sig, SIG_DFL);
unblock_signal (sig);
raise (sig);
}
/* Allow users to distinguish if command was forcably killed.
Needed with --foreground where we don't send SIGKILL to
the timeout process itself. */
if (timed_out && sig == SIGKILL)
preserve_status = true;
status = sig + 128; /* what sh returns for signaled processes. */
}
else
{
/* shouldn't happen. */
error (0, 0, _("unknown status from command (%d)"), status);
status = EXIT_FAILURE;
}
}
if (timed_out && !preserve_status)
status = EXIT_TIMEDOUT;
return status;
}
}