[NB. This is related to How do I launch a completely independent process from a Java program? but different]
I want to be able to spawn external processes (shell scripts) from a "manager" Java process that should keep running when the JVM is killed - but it seems that when I kill the parent Java program the child is killed too (note, the behaviour is different if the JVM exits naturally). The simplest test program I have is:
public class Runit {
public static void main(String args[]) throws IOException, InterruptedException {
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(args[0]);
// doesn't work this way either
// ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder(args[0]);
// pb.start();
while (true) {
System.out.println("Kill me");
Thread.sleep(2000);
}
}
}
and external script:
#!/bin/sh
while [ 1 ] ; do
ls
sleep 1
done
run as
java -classpath jar-with-dependencies.jar temp.exec.Runit runit.sh
If the manager simply exits (i.e. take out the "while" loop in the Java program) then the spawned process keeps running, but when I Ctrl+c the Java program the external program is killed too which is not what I want.
I'm using OpenJDK 1.6 on Ubuntu.
Edit1: Changing the exec to
Runtime.getRuntime().exec("/usr/bin/nohup " + args[0]);
doesn't help.
Edit2: Adding a shutdown hook as described in How to gracefully handle the SIGKILL signal in Java doesn't stop the Ctrl+c being propagated to the child.