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Date:      Wed, 31 Mar 2004 13:28:41 +0800 (PHT)
From:      rfa@msumain.edu.ph
To:        "Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P." <kdk@daleco.biz>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: log off with process running
Message-ID:  <1789.203.177.105.170.1080710921.squirrel@bayok.msumain.edu.ph>
In-Reply-To: <4063A1E8.7040008@daleco.biz>
References:   <20040326092248.4845573e.y2kbug@ms25.hinet.net><1080264423.630.11.came l@gandalf> <4063A1E8.7040008@daleco.biz>

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>>nohup is a possible solution; check its man page.
>>
>>Example:
>>
>>$ nohup wget http://server/big.iso &
>>
>>On Fri, 2004-03-26 at 05:22, Robert Storey wrote:
>>
>>>I want to log off and hang up the modem. The question is, how to do so?
>>> With the above process running, I can't even get back to the command
line to type "exit"
>>>(and wouldn't typing "exit" kill any process I'm running?). Ditto if I
>>> hit ctrl-c. I suppose I could just hang up the modem, but that's not
>>> elegant.
>

> Screen, nohup, etc; all great answers.
>
> Just for curiosity's sake, isn't standard redirection
> the first thing to think of?
>
> #cvsup /ports-via-modem.sup > /root/cvsuplog &
>
> Wanna get it back?
>
> #jobs
> [1]  + Running                       cvsup /ports-via-modem.sup >
> /root/cvsuplog
>
> Wanna keep it in the bg, but check its current status?
>
> $tail -f  /myhome/cvsuplog
>
> Willing to be educated,
>
> Kevin Kinsey
> DaleCo, S.P.
>

I was wondering if I did something like this using putty:

#nohup btlaunchmany.py . &

and then the session was terminated because of a power spike, how could I
put the process back into the foreground after logging in again so I could
see its statistics?  I wouldnt want to use redirection because it would
probably use too much disk.

Thanks,

Rommel






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