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{{Short description |Control of jobs
{{About |job control on a Unix-based system |the general computing term |job control (computing){{!}}job control}}
In a [[Unix]] or [[Unix-like]] [[operating system]], '''job control''' refers to controlling a [[process group]] as a [[job (computing)|job]] via a [[Unix shell| shell]].<ref>IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, [http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap03.html#tag_03_201 Section 3.201, Job]</ref> Control features include suspend, resume, and terminate, and more advanced features can be performed by sending a [[signal (computing)|signal]] to a job. Job control allows a user to manage processing in the Unix-based [[multiprocessing]] environment, and is distinct from [[job control (computing)|general computing job control]].
A job encompasses all of the processes that start for the handling of a shell [[command line]]. A simple command line my start just one process, but a command line may result in multiple processes since a process can create [[child process]]es, and a command line can specify a [[Pipeline (Unix)|pipeline]] of multiple commands. For example, the following command line selects lines containing the text "title", sorts them alphabetically, and displays the result in a [[terminal pager]]: <code>grep title somefile.txt | sort | less</code>. This creates at least three processes: one for [[grep|{{code |grep}}]], one for {{code |sort}}, and one for [[less (Unix)|{{code |less}}]]. Job control allows the shell to control these processes as one entity.▼
By default, a job runs in the foreground. The user enters a command line and interacts with the processes (since they can access the [[standard streams |interactive input and output]]) but cannot issue another command until the current job terminates. Many operations (i.e. listing files) are relatively quick so the user can wait for a response with little down time and some operations (i.e. editing) require interaction that is only possible via a foreground job. But, if interaction is not required and the operation prevents access to the shell for a long time, the user may want to run it in the background. Job control allows the user to run a job in the background {{endash}} where the processes cannot access interactive input and output but the user can perform other foreground operations.▼
[[POSIX]] specifies job control {{endash}} modeled after the Korn shell job control commands.<ref>{{man|cu|bg|SUS}}; {{man|cu|fg|SUS}}.</ref>. If a command line ends with {{code|&}}, then the job starts in the background. Command {{code|fg}} causes a background job to run in the foreground; either the job specified or the one most recently added to the background if none specified. Command [[wait (command)|<code>wait</code>]] pauses the interactive session for the specified background jobs to complete or for all background jobs of the active shell if none is specified.<ref>{{cite web | last=Kerrisk| first=Michael |date=Feb 2, 2025 |title=wait(1p) — Linux manual page |website=man7.org |url=https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/wait.1p.html |publisher= |access-date=May 13, 2025}}</ref> The foreground job can be paused by pressing {{keypress|Control|Z}} and when paused it can be resumed in the background via command {{code|bg}}.▼
Job control was first implemented in the [[C shell]] by Jim Kulp,<ref>
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The [[KornShell]], developed at [[Bell Labs]], adopted it and it was later incorporated into the SVR4 version of the [[Bourne shell]], and exists in most modern Unix shells.
==Job
▲A job encompasses all of the processes that start for the handling of a shell [[command line]]. A simple command line
A job is identified by a [[Handle (computing)|handle]]{{efn|A job ID is an abstract reference by the shell to a resource (a process group) managed externally, by the operating system, hence is a handle.}} called the ''job control job ID'', a.k.a. ''{{visible anchor|job ID}}'', a.k.a. ''job number'', which is used by [[shell builtin]]s to refer to the job. A job ID begins with the <code>%</code> character; <code>%n</code> identifies job ''n'', while <code>%%</code> identifies the current job. Other job IDs are specified by [[POSIX]].<ref>IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, [http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap03.html#tag_03_203 Section 3.203, Job Control Job ID]</ref> Bash documentation refers to the (%-prefixed) job ID as the ''jobspec.''<ref>[https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Job-Control-Basics.html#Job-Control-Basics 7.1 Job Control Basics]</ref>▼
==Job ID{{anchor |job ID}}==
Job control and IDs are typically only used in an interactive shell. In scripting, PGIDs are used instead, as they are more precise and robust, and indeed job control is disabled by default in a bash script.▼
▲A job is identified by a numeric ''job ID'', a.k.a. ''job number'' which is classified as a [[Handle (computing)|handle]]
▲Job control
==Foreground/background==
▲By default, a job runs in the foreground where it uses [[standard streams |interactive input and output]]. The user enters a command line and interacts with the processes
==Control==
[[POSIX]] specifies the [[user interface]] to job control {{endash}} modeled on the Korn shell.<ref>{{man|cu|bg|SUS}}; {{man|cu|fg|SUS}}.</ref>. The commands are typically implemented as [[shell builtin]]s; not separate [[computer program |programs]].
; Start in background
:If a command line ends with {{code|&}}, then the job starts in the background.
; Pause foreground job
:The foreground job can be paused by pressing {{keypress |Ctrl| Z}}. In this state, a job can be resumed in the background via {{code |bg}} or resumed in the foreground via {{code |fg}}.
; Command {{code |fg}} {{anchor| fg}}
:Command {{code |fg}} (short for foreground) moves background job to the foreground; either the job specified or the one most recently added to the background if none specified. When the foreground job is paused (via {{keypress |Ctrl| Z}}), then this command resumes that job.
; Command {{code |wait}}
▲
; Command {{code |bg}} {{anchor| bg}}
:Command {{code |bg}} (short for background) moves the paused foreground job to the background and resumes it.
; Command {{code |jobs}}
:Command {{code |jobs}} reports information about each background job including ID, command line and running status (stopped or running).
==Signals==
{{Unreferenced section|date=February 2020}}
The [[interprocess communication]] of job control is implemented via [[Unix signal |signal]]s.
Typically, a shell maintains information about background jobs in a job table. When an [[login session |interactive session]] ends (i.e. user [[logout |logs out]]), the shell sends signal [[SIGHUP]] to all jobs, and waits for the process groups to exit before terminating itself. Some shells provide a non-POSIX command [[Disown (Unix)|<code>disown</code>]] that removes a job from the job table. The process group becomes an [[orphan process |orphan]]. The shell will not send it SIGHUP, nor wait for it to terminate. This is one technique for enabling a process as a [[daemon (computer software)|daemon]]; owned direclty by the root process [[init]]. The POSIX command [[nohup |{{code |nohup}}]] provides an alternate way to prevent a job from being terminated by the shell.
When a stopped job is resumed (via {{code |bg}} or {{code |fg}}), the shell redirects [[Input/output]] and resumes it by sending signal SIGCONT to it.
A background process that attempts to read from or write to its [[controlling terminal]] is sent
In
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==References==
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