Yes, there is indeed a race condition in the sample script. You can use bash's noclobber
option in order to get a failure in case of a race, when a different script sneaks in between the -f
test and the touch
.
The following is a sample code-snippet (inspired by this article) that illustrates the mechanism:
if (set -o noclobber; echo "$$" > "$lockfile") 2> /dev/null;
then
# This will cause the lock-file to be deleted in case of a
# premature exit.
trap 'rm -f "$lockfile"; exit $?' INT TERM EXIT
# Critical Section: Here you'd place the code/commands you want
# to be protected (i.e., not run in multiple processes at once).
rm -f "$lockfile"
trap - INT TERM EXIT
else
echo "Failed to acquire lock-file: $lockfile."
echo "Held by process $(cat $lockfile)."
fi
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