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How can I get screen to execute a command and then detach (That is, automatically in a single script without further input beyond initially starting the script)? e.g. I run myscript.sh and it automatically starts a screen session, executes a command, then detaches.

1
  • It is important to note that for many of these answers, screen will automatically terminate your screen when the command is done running and the program exits. So, you might think it didn't work, but you are likely just not seeing it because it terminated. That is why there is a sleep or exec command in answers below, to force screen to not terminate.
    – Akaisteph7
    Jul 29, 2022 at 18:49

8 Answers 8

234

This is an easy one:

screen -d -m yourcommand

From the Screen User's Manual:

-d -m
Start screen in detached mode. This creates a new session but doesn’t attach to it. This is useful for system startup scripts.

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  • 11
    no dice. screen -d -m command, screen -list says no sockets, screen -r no sessions
    – darkfeline
    Jul 29, 2012 at 2:24
  • 1
    Somehow your command wasn't found, or isn't working correctly in the automatically-created screen environment. Try just doing screen yourcommand without the -d and -m and see how that goes first.
    – Alan Curry
    Jul 29, 2012 at 2:28
  • 1
    You're sort of right. screen terminates when the command finishes, contrary to my expectations. But your answer does work.
    – darkfeline
    Jul 29, 2012 at 2:34
  • 6
    You can change that by enabling the zombie option in screen. Put zombie xy in your ~/.screenrc. It should also be possible to enable it for one session only b putting zombie xy in another file and using -c file but for some reason that's not working when I try it. Or just use sh -c 'yourcommand;while :;do sleep 9999; done'
    – Alan Curry
    Jul 29, 2012 at 2:39
  • 1
    @AlanCurry, Nope, this doesn't work for me either, even though the command runs perfectly (and takes several hours) when run in a screen manually.
    – Cerin
    Sep 27, 2014 at 3:08
109

To run a single command in screen and detach, you may try:

screen -dm sleep 10

To run multiple commands, try:

screen -dm bash -c "sleep 10; myscript.sh"

Please note that when a program terminates, screen (per default) kills the window that contained it.

If you don't want your session to get killed after script is finished, add exec sh at the end, e.g.:

screen -dm bash -c 'sleep 5; exec sh'

To list all your sessions, try:

screen -list

Related: Start Unix screen, Run command, Detach.

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  • 9
    This worked for me on Ubuntu 16.04. In addition to name your session so you can return to it later, add -S sessionname: screen -dmS MyLongRunningScript bash -c "...". May 26, 2017 at 21:33
  • Is there a way to replace 5 in screen -dm bash -c 'sleep 5; exec sh' by a variable? Jan 8, 2020 at 8:43
  • 1
    @RadioControlled time=5; screen -m bash -c "sleep $time; exec sh"
    – kenorb
    Jan 8, 2020 at 10:21
  • @kenorb, the problem is that it only worked with single quotes. Let's say: 'for k in `seq $i $j`; do echo $k; done', where $i and $j are from the parent script. Jan 8, 2020 at 12:37
  • This is a robust answer. I needed bash -c. I can only assume that when I called screen -dm head foo > bar it wrote screen -dm head foo to bar. screen -dm bash -c "head foo > bar" fixed that. Apr 3, 2023 at 6:18
34

In order to start new session in background with name 'sleepy'

screen -S sleepy -dm sleep 60

In order to kill 'sleepy' session

screen -S sleepy -X quit      
2
  • why doesn't it work like screen -S sleepy -dm "cd myfolder;sleep 60" ?
    – Toolkit
    Dec 28, 2017 at 9:22
  • 1
    @Toolkit The issue is that you have the command in quotes and so it was treated as one large command. Obviously we can't take it out of quotes because of the semicolon. To solve this, execute the command like so: screen -S sleepy -dm bash -c "cd myfolder;sleep 60" Mar 1, 2019 at 15:51
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screen -dmS screen_session_name bash -c 'echo "doing stuff"; exec bash'
4

it happen to me when I pressed control c (sig int) to exit my program. it exits all the way from all bash. so I found this to catch SIGINT. and prevent exit from last bash. (need to type exit to exit)

screen -dmS "screenNameHere" bash -c "trap 'echo gotsigint' INT; cd /mydir ; my_command_here;  bash"


example:

screen -dmS "status_updates" bash -c "trap 'echo gotsigint' INT; cd /opt/status_update ; forever index.js ;  bash"

I find it useful to use cron to run nodejs programs on startup. and to run the screen at boot time. in cron there are special events syntax @reboot event

to edit cron, execute:
crontab -e

then type
@reboot screen -dmS "screenNameHere" bash -c "trap 'echo gotsigint' INT; cd /mydir ; my_command_here;  bash"
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  • 1
    exactly what was looking for -- had same issue where shell would exit -- thanks! P.S. and screen -r SessionName -x {quit, kill} can be used later if needed Apr 12, 2020 at 20:00
2

Here are the steps you can follow to run a process in screen, detach from the terminal, and then reattach.

  1. From the command prompt, just run screen. This will give you a new subshell.

  2. Run your desired program

  3. Detatch from the screen session using the key sequence Ctrl-a Ctrl-d (note that all screen key bindings start with Ctrl-a). This will drop you back to your original shell and display a message "[detached]", indicating that the screen session is still running.

  4. You can then list the available screen sessions by running screen -list

  5. You can reattach to this screen session by running screen -r. Once reattached, you will be able to take off where you left off and see any output that was printed to the screen during the time that you were detached. If you have multiple screen sessions, then you can specify the tty name (as displayed by screen -list) as an argument to screen -r to attach to a particular session.

Source

0

Buliding on some of the ideas in other answers here, and on https://serverfault.com/questions/368054/run-an-interactive-bash-subshell-with-initial-commands-without-returning-to-the my soloution was.

screen -dm bash -c 'bash --init-file <(echo command)'

replacing command with the command to execute.

This is the closest equivilent I can think of to manually starting a screen session and then running a command inside it.

ctrl+c works as it normally would in an interactive session to kill the program and return to a shell inside screen. Unfortunately ctrl+z doesn't seem to work.

-1

I hope this may help for screen issues: https://askubuntu.com/questions/124897/how-do-i-detach-a-screen-session-from-a-terminal/1429444#1429444

3
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