nohup(C)
nohup --
run a command immune to hangups and quits
Syntax
nohup command [ arguments ]
Description
The nohup command executes command with hangups
ignored. If output is not redirected by the user, it will be
appended
to nohup.out. If the user does not have write permission
in the current directory, output is redirected to
$HOME/nohup.out.
If neither file can be created or opened for appending,
command is not invoked.
If the nohup.out file does not exist, it is created only
with user read and write permissions.
The nohup utility returns the same exit status as the
command. However, if the command was found but could not be
executed, or the command could not be found, nohup returns
an exit status of 126 or 127 respectively.
Exit values
nohup returns the following values:
126-
command could be found but not invoked
127-
command could not be found
Otherwise, the exit status of nohup is the same as that
of the command operand.
Limitations
The nohup standalone program is used by the Bourne
shell. The C shell implements nohup as a
built-in command; the Korn shell aliases nohup. For
further details see
sh(C),
csh(C),
and
ksh(C).
nohup cannot be used to set up a background process that
needs to read from or write to the controlling terminal; this causes
command to terminate with EIO set in
errno. An example would be a program, initially set up
over a modem line, and intended to service incoming calls on that
line. In such a case, the
setpgrp(C)
command should be used instead.
See also
kill(C),
nice(C),
setpgrp(C),
signal(S-osr5)
Standards conformance
nohup is conformant with:
ISO/IEC DIS 99452:1992, Information technology Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) Part 2: Shell and Utilities (IEEE Std 1003.21992);
AT&T SVID Issue 2;
X/Open CAE Specification, Commands and Utilities, Issue 4, 1992.
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 -- 03 June 2005