Erik wrote: > I was wondering if anyone knew a way to allow a shell > command to run for a specific period of time. In this > particular case, I want tcpdump to run for 23 hours, > 59 minutes, 59 seconds. It would be best if the process could limit itself, since anything you do in a shell script will have sloppy timing, maybe a few seconds off. But you can do this for any process, using the following crude approach within a single script: This script should be run with all its output redirected to a log file, so you can have a record of how it went. Run your process (tcpdump) in the background with & This becomes an independent process, so the next command in your script will start immediately: date # output goes into your log file. sleep 86399 # Or less, since kill won't be instantaneous date Use a pipeline with "ps -ef" and "grep" to identify the running tcpdump process. Extract the pid using "cut" and do a "kill". sleep 2 # just to give kill time to take effect ps -ef | grep ... # Did it go away? date exit Details on request, but the above commands are good things to learn. This type of ps + grep pipeline is also useful to detect if a duplicate copy of a script is running, etc. The sleep command is only precise to within a second or two, and other system activity might delay the next command. Vic --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss