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085d0e35 1@node Processes, Inter-Process Communication, Program Basics, Top
7a68c94a 2@c %MENU% How to create processes and run other programs
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3@chapter Processes
4
5@cindex process
6@dfn{Processes} are the primitive units for allocation of system
7resources. Each process has its own address space and (usually) one
8thread of control. A process executes a program; you can have multiple
9processes executing the same program, but each process has its own copy
10of the program within its own address space and executes it
11independently of the other copies.
12
13@cindex child process
14@cindex parent process
15Processes are organized hierarchically. Each process has a @dfn{parent
16process} which explicitly arranged to create it. The processes created
17by a given parent are called its @dfn{child processes}. A child
18inherits many of its attributes from the parent process.
19
20This chapter describes how a program can create, terminate, and control
21child processes. Actually, there are three distinct operations
22involved: creating a new child process, causing the new process to
23execute a program, and coordinating the completion of the child process
24with the original program.
25
26The @code{system} function provides a simple, portable mechanism for
27running another program; it does all three steps automatically. If you
28need more control over the details of how this is done, you can use the
29primitive functions to do each step individually instead.
30
31@menu
32* Running a Command:: The easy way to run another program.
33* Process Creation Concepts:: An overview of the hard way to do it.
34* Process Identification:: How to get the process ID of a process.
35* Creating a Process:: How to fork a child process.
36* Executing a File:: How to make a process execute another program.
37* Process Completion:: How to tell when a child process has completed.
f65fd747 38* Process Completion Status:: How to interpret the status value
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39 returned from a child process.
40* BSD Wait Functions:: More functions, for backward compatibility.
41* Process Creation Example:: A complete example program.
42@end menu
43
44
45@node Running a Command
46@section Running a Command
47@cindex running a command
48
49The easy way to run another program is to use the @code{system}
50function. This function does all the work of running a subprogram, but
51it doesn't give you much control over the details: you have to wait
52until the subprogram terminates before you can do anything else.
53
28f540f4 54@deftypefun int system (const char *@var{command})
d08a7e4c 55@standards{ISO, stdlib.h}
28f540f4 56@pindex sh
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57@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuplugin{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}}
58@c system @ascuplugin @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem
59@c do_system @ascuplugin @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem
60@c sigemptyset dup ok
61@c libc_lock_lock @asulock @aculock
62@c ADD_REF ok
63@c sigaction dup ok
64@c SUB_REF ok
65@c libc_lock_unlock @aculock
66@c sigaddset dup ok
67@c sigprocmask dup ok
68@c CLEANUP_HANDLER @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
69@c libc_cleanup_region_start @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
70@c pthread_cleanup_push_defer @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
2b517425 71@c __pthread_testcancel @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
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72@c CANCEL_ENABLED_AND_CANCELED ok
73@c do_cancel @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
74@c cancel_handler ok
75@c kill syscall ok
76@c waitpid dup ok
77@c libc_lock_lock ok
78@c sigaction dup ok
79@c libc_lock_unlock ok
80@c FORK ok
81@c clone syscall ok
82@c waitpid dup ok
83@c CLEANUP_RESET ok
84@c libc_cleanup_region_end ok
85@c pthread_cleanup_pop_restore ok
86@c SINGLE_THREAD_P ok
87@c LIBC_CANCEL_ASYNC @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
88@c libc_enable_asynccancel @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
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89@c do_cancel dup @ascuplugin @ascuheap @acsmem
90@c LIBC_CANCEL_RESET ok
91@c libc_disable_asynccancel ok
92@c lll_futex_wait dup ok
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93This function executes @var{command} as a shell command. In @theglibc{},
94it always uses the default shell @code{sh} to run the command.
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95In particular, it searches the directories in @code{PATH} to find
96programs to execute. The return value is @code{-1} if it wasn't
97possible to create the shell process, and otherwise is the status of the
98shell process. @xref{Process Completion}, for details on how this
99status code can be interpreted.
100
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101If the @var{command} argument is a null pointer, a return value of zero
102indicates that no command processor is available.
cc3fa755 103
0bc93a2f 104This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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105is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
106descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{system} is
107called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
108until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{system} should be
0bc93a2f 109protected using cancellation handlers.
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110@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
111
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112@pindex stdlib.h
113The @code{system} function is declared in the header file
114@file{stdlib.h}.
115@end deftypefun
116
117@strong{Portability Note:} Some C implementations may not have any
118notion of a command processor that can execute other programs. You can
119determine whether a command processor exists by executing
120@w{@code{system (NULL)}}; if the return value is nonzero, a command
121processor is available.
122
123The @code{popen} and @code{pclose} functions (@pxref{Pipe to a
124Subprocess}) are closely related to the @code{system} function. They
125allow the parent process to communicate with the standard input and
126output channels of the command being executed.
127
128@node Process Creation Concepts
129@section Process Creation Concepts
130
131This section gives an overview of processes and of the steps involved in
132creating a process and making it run another program.
133
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134@cindex creating a process
135@cindex forking a process
136@cindex child process
137@cindex parent process
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138@cindex subprocess
139A new processes is created when one of the functions
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140@code{posix_spawn}, @code{fork}, @code{_Fork} or @code{vfork} is called.
141(The @code{system} and @code{popen} also create new processes internally.)
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142Due to the name of the @code{fork} function, the act of creating a new
143process is sometimes called @dfn{forking} a process. Each new process
144(the @dfn{child process} or @dfn{subprocess}) is allocated a process
145ID, distinct from the process ID of the parent process. @xref{Process
146Identification}.
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147
148After forking a child process, both the parent and child processes
149continue to execute normally. If you want your program to wait for a
150child process to finish executing before continuing, you must do this
151explicitly after the fork operation, by calling @code{wait} or
152@code{waitpid} (@pxref{Process Completion}). These functions give you
153limited information about why the child terminated---for example, its
154exit status code.
155
156A newly forked child process continues to execute the same program as
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157its parent process, at the point where the @code{fork} or @code{_Fork}
158call returns. You can use the return value from @code{fork} or
159@code{_Fork} to tell whether the program is running in the parent process
160or the child.
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161
162@cindex process image
163Having several processes run the same program is only occasionally
164useful. But the child can execute another program using one of the
165@code{exec} functions; see @ref{Executing a File}. The program that the
166process is executing is called its @dfn{process image}. Starting
167execution of a new program causes the process to forget all about its
168previous process image; when the new program exits, the process exits
169too, instead of returning to the previous process image.
170
171@node Process Identification
172@section Process Identification
173
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174@cindex process ID
175Each process is named by a @dfn{process ID} number, a value of type
176@code{pid_t}. A process ID is allocated to each process when it is
177created. Process IDs are reused over time. The lifetime of a process
178ends when the parent process of the corresponding process waits on the
179process ID after the process has terminated. @xref{Process
180Completion}. (The parent process can arrange for such waiting to
181happen implicitly.) A process ID uniquely identifies a process only
182during the lifetime of the process. As a rule of thumb, this means
183that the process must still be running.
184
185Process IDs can also denote process groups and sessions.
186@xref{Job Control}.
187
188@cindex thread ID
189@cindex task ID
190@cindex thread group
191On Linux, threads created by @code{pthread_create} also receive a
192@dfn{thread ID}. The thread ID of the initial (main) thread is the
193same as the process ID of the entire process. Thread IDs for
194subsequently created threads are distinct. They are allocated from
195the same numbering space as process IDs. Process IDs and thread IDs
196are sometimes also referred to collectively as @dfn{task IDs}. In
197contrast to processes, threads are never waited for explicitly, so a
198thread ID becomes eligible for reuse as soon as a thread exits or is
199canceled. This is true even for joinable threads, not just detached
200threads. Threads are assigned to a @dfn{thread group}. In
201@theglibc{} implementation running on Linux, the process ID is the
202thread group ID of all threads in the process.
203
204You can get the process ID of a process by calling @code{getpid}. The
205function @code{getppid} returns the process ID of the parent of the
206current process (this is also known as the @dfn{parent process ID}).
207Your program should include the header files @file{unistd.h} and
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208@file{sys/types.h} to use these functions.
209@pindex sys/types.h
210@pindex unistd.h
211
28f540f4 212@deftp {Data Type} pid_t
d08a7e4c 213@standards{POSIX.1, sys/types.h}
28f540f4 214The @code{pid_t} data type is a signed integer type which is capable
1f77f049 215of representing a process ID. In @theglibc{}, this is an @code{int}.
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216@end deftp
217
28f540f4 218@deftypefun pid_t getpid (void)
d08a7e4c 219@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 220@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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221The @code{getpid} function returns the process ID of the current process.
222@end deftypefun
223
28f540f4 224@deftypefun pid_t getppid (void)
d08a7e4c 225@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 226@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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227The @code{getppid} function returns the process ID of the parent of the
228current process.
229@end deftypefun
230
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231@deftypefun pid_t gettid (void)
232@standards{Linux, unistd.h}
233@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
234The @code{gettid} function returns the thread ID of the current
235thread. The returned value is obtained from the Linux kernel and is
236not subject to caching. See the discussion of thread IDs above,
237especially regarding reuse of the IDs of threads which have exited.
238
239This function is specific to Linux.
240@end deftypefun
241
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242@node Creating a Process
243@section Creating a Process
244
245The @code{fork} function is the primitive for creating a process.
246It is declared in the header file @file{unistd.h}.
247@pindex unistd.h
248
28f540f4 249@deftypefun pid_t fork (void)
d08a7e4c 250@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 251@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuplugin{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{}}}
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252@c The posix/fork.c implementation iterates over the fork_handlers
253@c using a lock. It then takes the IO_list lock, resets the thread-local
254@c pid, and runs fork. The parent releases the lock, and runs parent
255@c handlers, and unlocks the internal lock. The child bumps the fork
256@c generation, sets the thread-local pid, resets cpu clocks, initializes
257@c the robust mutex list, the stream locks, the IO_list lock, the dynamic
258@c loader lock, runs the child handlers, reseting ref counters to 1, and
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259@c initializes the fork lock. These are all safe, unless atfork
260@c handlers themselves are unsafe.
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261The @code{fork} function creates a new process.
262
263If the operation is successful, there are then both parent and child
264processes and both see @code{fork} return, but with different values: it
265returns a value of @code{0} in the child process and returns the child's
266process ID in the parent process.
267
268If process creation failed, @code{fork} returns a value of @code{-1} in
269the parent process. The following @code{errno} error conditions are
270defined for @code{fork}:
271
272@table @code
273@item EAGAIN
274There aren't enough system resources to create another process, or the
275user already has too many processes running. This means exceeding the
276@code{RLIMIT_NPROC} resource limit, which can usually be increased;
277@pxref{Limits on Resources}.
278
279@item ENOMEM
280The process requires more space than the system can supply.
281@end table
282@end deftypefun
283
284The specific attributes of the child process that differ from the
285parent process are:
286
287@itemize @bullet
288@item
289The child process has its own unique process ID.
290
291@item
292The parent process ID of the child process is the process ID of its
293parent process.
294
295@item
296The child process gets its own copies of the parent process's open file
297descriptors. Subsequently changing attributes of the file descriptors
298in the parent process won't affect the file descriptors in the child,
299and vice versa. @xref{Control Operations}. However, the file position
300associated with each descriptor is shared by both processes;
301@pxref{File Position}.
302
303@item
304The elapsed processor times for the child process are set to zero;
305see @ref{Processor Time}.
306
307@item
308The child doesn't inherit file locks set by the parent process.
309@c !!! flock locks shared
310@xref{Control Operations}.
311
312@item
313The child doesn't inherit alarms set by the parent process.
314@xref{Setting an Alarm}.
315
316@item
317The set of pending signals (@pxref{Delivery of Signal}) for the child
318process is cleared. (The child process inherits its mask of blocked
319signals and signal actions from the parent process.)
f65fd747 320@end itemize
28f540f4 321
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322@deftypefun pid_t _Fork (void)
323@standards{GNU, unistd.h}
324@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
325The @code{_Fork} function is similar to @code{fork}, but it does not invoke
326any callbacks registered with @code{pthread_atfork}, nor does it reset
327any internal state or locks (such as the @code{malloc} locks). In the
328new subprocess, only async-signal-safe functions may be called, such as
329@code{dup2} or @code{execve}.
330
331The @code{_Fork} function is an async-signal-safe replacement of @code{fork}.
332It is a GNU extension.
333
334@end deftypefun
28f540f4 335
28f540f4 336@deftypefun pid_t vfork (void)
d08a7e4c 337@standards{BSD, unistd.h}
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338@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuplugin{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{}}}
339@c The vfork implementation proper is a safe syscall, but it may fall
340@c back to fork if the vfork syscall is not available.
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341The @code{vfork} function is similar to @code{fork} but on some systems
342it is more efficient; however, there are restrictions you must follow to
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343use it safely.
344
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345While @code{fork} makes a complete copy of the calling process's address
346space and allows both the parent and child to execute independently,
347@code{vfork} does not make this copy. Instead, the child process
348created with @code{vfork} shares its parent's address space until it
349calls @code{_exit} or one of the @code{exec} functions. In the
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350meantime, the parent process suspends execution.
351
352You must be very careful not to allow the child process created with
353@code{vfork} to modify any global data or even local variables shared
354with the parent. Furthermore, the child process cannot return from (or
355do a long jump out of) the function that called @code{vfork}! This
356would leave the parent process's control information very confused. If
357in doubt, use @code{fork} instead.
358
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359Some operating systems don't really implement @code{vfork}. @Theglibc{}
360permits you to use @code{vfork} on all systems, but actually
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361executes @code{fork} if @code{vfork} isn't available. If you follow
362the proper precautions for using @code{vfork}, your program will still
363work even if the system uses @code{fork} instead.
364@end deftypefun
365
366@node Executing a File
367@section Executing a File
368@cindex executing a file
369@cindex @code{exec} functions
370
371This section describes the @code{exec} family of functions, for executing
372a file as a process image. You can use these functions to make a child
373process execute a new program after it has been forked.
374
17c389fc 375To see the effects of @code{exec} from the point of view of the called
88197030 376program, see @ref{Program Basics}.
17c389fc 377
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378@pindex unistd.h
379The functions in this family differ in how you specify the arguments,
380but otherwise they all do the same thing. They are declared in the
381header file @file{unistd.h}.
382
28f540f4 383@deftypefun int execv (const char *@var{filename}, char *const @var{argv}@t{[]})
d08a7e4c 384@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 385@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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386The @code{execv} function executes the file named by @var{filename} as a
387new process image.
388
389The @var{argv} argument is an array of null-terminated strings that is
390used to provide a value for the @code{argv} argument to the @code{main}
391function of the program to be executed. The last element of this array
392must be a null pointer. By convention, the first element of this array
393is the file name of the program sans directory names. @xref{Program
394Arguments}, for full details on how programs can access these arguments.
395
396The environment for the new process image is taken from the
397@code{environ} variable of the current process image; see
398@ref{Environment Variables}, for information about environments.
399@end deftypefun
400
28f540f4 401@deftypefun int execl (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{arg0}, @dots{})
d08a7e4c 402@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 403@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
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404This is similar to @code{execv}, but the @var{argv} strings are
405specified individually instead of as an array. A null pointer must be
406passed as the last such argument.
407@end deftypefun
408
28f540f4 409@deftypefun int execve (const char *@var{filename}, char *const @var{argv}@t{[]}, char *const @var{env}@t{[]})
d08a7e4c 410@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 411@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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412This is similar to @code{execv}, but permits you to specify the environment
413for the new program explicitly as the @var{env} argument. This should
f65fd747 414be an array of strings in the same format as for the @code{environ}
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415variable; see @ref{Environment Access}.
416@end deftypefun
417
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418@deftypefun int fexecve (int @var{fd}, char *const @var{argv}@t{[]}, char *const @var{env}@t{[]})
419@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
420@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2a8682ea 421This is similar to @code{execve}, but instead of identifying the program
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422executable by its pathname, the file descriptor @var{fd} is used. The
423descriptor must have been opened with the @code{O_RDONLY} flag or (on
424Linux) the @code{O_PATH} flag.
425
426On Linux, @code{fexecve} can fail with an error of @code{ENOSYS} if
427@file{/proc} has not been mounted and the kernel lacks support for the
428underlying @code{execveat} system call.
429@end deftypefun
430
d1b10e78 431@deftypefun int execle (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{arg0}, @dots{}, char *const @var{env}@t{[]})
d08a7e4c 432@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 433@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
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434This is similar to @code{execl}, but permits you to specify the
435environment for the new program explicitly. The environment argument is
436passed following the null pointer that marks the last @var{argv}
437argument, and should be an array of strings in the same format as for
438the @code{environ} variable.
439@end deftypefun
440
28f540f4 441@deftypefun int execvp (const char *@var{filename}, char *const @var{argv}@t{[]})
d08a7e4c 442@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 443@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsenv{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
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444The @code{execvp} function is similar to @code{execv}, except that it
445searches the directories listed in the @code{PATH} environment variable
446(@pxref{Standard Environment}) to find the full file name of a
447file from @var{filename} if @var{filename} does not contain a slash.
448
449This function is useful for executing system utility programs, because
450it looks for them in the places that the user has chosen. Shells use it
451to run the commands that users type.
452@end deftypefun
453
28f540f4 454@deftypefun int execlp (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{arg0}, @dots{})
d08a7e4c 455@standards{POSIX.1, unistd.h}
19f5d29c 456@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsenv{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
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457This function is like @code{execl}, except that it performs the same
458file name searching as the @code{execvp} function.
459@end deftypefun
460
461The size of the argument list and environment list taken together must
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462not be greater than @code{ARG_MAX} bytes. @xref{General Limits}. On
463@gnuhurdsystems{}, the size (which compares against @code{ARG_MAX})
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464includes, for each string, the number of characters in the string, plus
465the size of a @code{char *}, plus one, rounded up to a multiple of the
466size of a @code{char *}. Other systems may have somewhat different
467rules for counting.
468
469These functions normally don't return, since execution of a new program
470causes the currently executing program to go away completely. A value
471of @code{-1} is returned in the event of a failure. In addition to the
472usual file name errors (@pxref{File Name Errors}), the following
473@code{errno} error conditions are defined for these functions:
474
475@table @code
476@item E2BIG
477The combined size of the new program's argument list and environment
a7a93d50 478list is larger than @code{ARG_MAX} bytes. @gnuhurdsystems{} have no
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479specific limit on the argument list size, so this error code cannot
480result, but you may get @code{ENOMEM} instead if the arguments are too
481big for available memory.
482
483@item ENOEXEC
484The specified file can't be executed because it isn't in the right format.
485
486@item ENOMEM
487Executing the specified file requires more storage than is available.
488@end table
489
490If execution of the new file succeeds, it updates the access time field
491of the file as if the file had been read. @xref{File Times}, for more
492details about access times of files.
493
494The point at which the file is closed again is not specified, but
495is at some point before the process exits or before another process
496image is executed.
497
498Executing a new process image completely changes the contents of memory,
499copying only the argument and environment strings to new locations. But
500many other attributes of the process are unchanged:
501
502@itemize @bullet
503@item
504The process ID and the parent process ID. @xref{Process Creation Concepts}.
505
506@item
507Session and process group membership. @xref{Concepts of Job Control}.
508
509@item
510Real user ID and group ID, and supplementary group IDs. @xref{Process
511Persona}.
512
513@item
514Pending alarms. @xref{Setting an Alarm}.
515
516@item
517Current working directory and root directory. @xref{Working
a7a93d50 518Directory}. On @gnuhurdsystems{}, the root directory is not copied when
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519executing a setuid program; instead the system default root directory
520is used for the new program.
521
522@item
523File mode creation mask. @xref{Setting Permissions}.
524
525@item
526Process signal mask; see @ref{Process Signal Mask}.
527
528@item
529Pending signals; see @ref{Blocking Signals}.
530
531@item
532Elapsed processor time associated with the process; see @ref{Processor Time}.
533@end itemize
534
535If the set-user-ID and set-group-ID mode bits of the process image file
536are set, this affects the effective user ID and effective group ID
537(respectively) of the process. These concepts are discussed in detail
538in @ref{Process Persona}.
539
540Signals that are set to be ignored in the existing process image are
541also set to be ignored in the new process image. All other signals are
542set to the default action in the new process image. For more
543information about signals, see @ref{Signal Handling}.
544
545File descriptors open in the existing process image remain open in the
546new process image, unless they have the @code{FD_CLOEXEC}
547(close-on-exec) flag set. The files that remain open inherit all
9cbcfebd 548attributes of the open file descriptors from the existing process image,
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549including file locks. File descriptors are discussed in @ref{Low-Level I/O}.
550
551Streams, by contrast, cannot survive through @code{exec} functions,
552because they are located in the memory of the process itself. The new
553process image has no streams except those it creates afresh. Each of
554the streams in the pre-@code{exec} process image has a descriptor inside
555it, and these descriptors do survive through @code{exec} (provided that
556they do not have @code{FD_CLOEXEC} set). The new process image can
557reconnect these to new streams using @code{fdopen} (@pxref{Descriptors
558and Streams}).
559
560@node Process Completion
561@section Process Completion
562@cindex process completion
563@cindex waiting for completion of child process
564@cindex testing exit status of child process
565
566The functions described in this section are used to wait for a child
567process to terminate or stop, and determine its status. These functions
568are declared in the header file @file{sys/wait.h}.
569@pindex sys/wait.h
570
28f540f4 571@deftypefun pid_t waitpid (pid_t @var{pid}, int *@var{status-ptr}, int @var{options})
d08a7e4c 572@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 573@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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574The @code{waitpid} function is used to request status information from a
575child process whose process ID is @var{pid}. Normally, the calling
576process is suspended until the child process makes status information
577available by terminating.
578
579Other values for the @var{pid} argument have special interpretations. A
580value of @code{-1} or @code{WAIT_ANY} requests status information for
581any child process; a value of @code{0} or @code{WAIT_MYPGRP} requests
582information for any child process in the same process group as the
583calling process; and any other negative value @minus{} @var{pgid}
584requests information for any child process whose process group ID is
585@var{pgid}.
586
587If status information for a child process is available immediately, this
588function returns immediately without waiting. If more than one eligible
589child process has status information available, one of them is chosen
590randomly, and its status is returned immediately. To get the status
591from the other eligible child processes, you need to call @code{waitpid}
592again.
593
594The @var{options} argument is a bit mask. Its value should be the
595bitwise OR (that is, the @samp{|} operator) of zero or more of the
596@code{WNOHANG} and @code{WUNTRACED} flags. You can use the
597@code{WNOHANG} flag to indicate that the parent process shouldn't wait;
598and the @code{WUNTRACED} flag to request status information from stopped
599processes as well as processes that have terminated.
600
601The status information from the child process is stored in the object
602that @var{status-ptr} points to, unless @var{status-ptr} is a null pointer.
603
0bc93a2f 604This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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605is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
606descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{waitpid} is
607called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
608until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{waitpid} should be
0bc93a2f 609protected using cancellation handlers.
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610@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
611
28f540f4 612The return value is normally the process ID of the child process whose
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613status is reported. If there are child processes but none of them is
614waiting to be noticed, @code{waitpid} will block until one is. However,
615if the @code{WNOHANG} option was specified, @code{waitpid} will return
616zero instead of blocking.
617
618If a specific PID to wait for was given to @code{waitpid}, it will
619ignore all other children (if any). Therefore if there are children
620waiting to be noticed but the child whose PID was specified is not one
621of them, @code{waitpid} will block or return zero as described above.
622
623A value of @code{-1} is returned in case of error. The following
624@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function:
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625
626@table @code
627@item EINTR
628The function was interrupted by delivery of a signal to the calling
629process. @xref{Interrupted Primitives}.
630
631@item ECHILD
632There are no child processes to wait for, or the specified @var{pid}
633is not a child of the calling process.
634
635@item EINVAL
636An invalid value was provided for the @var{options} argument.
637@end table
638@end deftypefun
639
640These symbolic constants are defined as values for the @var{pid} argument
641to the @code{waitpid} function.
642
643@comment Extra blank lines make it look better.
2fe82ca6 644@vtable @code
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645@item WAIT_ANY
646
647This constant macro (whose value is @code{-1}) specifies that
648@code{waitpid} should return status information about any child process.
649
650
651@item WAIT_MYPGRP
652This constant (with value @code{0}) specifies that @code{waitpid} should
653return status information about any child process in the same process
654group as the calling process.
2fe82ca6 655@end vtable
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656
657These symbolic constants are defined as flags for the @var{options}
658argument to the @code{waitpid} function. You can bitwise-OR the flags
659together to obtain a value to use as the argument.
660
2fe82ca6 661@vtable @code
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662@item WNOHANG
663
664This flag specifies that @code{waitpid} should return immediately
665instead of waiting, if there is no child process ready to be noticed.
666
667@item WUNTRACED
668
669This flag specifies that @code{waitpid} should report the status of any
670child processes that have been stopped as well as those that have
671terminated.
2fe82ca6 672@end vtable
28f540f4 673
28f540f4 674@deftypefun pid_t wait (int *@var{status-ptr})
d08a7e4c 675@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 676@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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677This is a simplified version of @code{waitpid}, and is used to wait
678until any one child process terminates. The call:
679
680@smallexample
681wait (&status)
682@end smallexample
683
684@noindent
685is exactly equivalent to:
686
687@smallexample
688waitpid (-1, &status, 0)
689@end smallexample
dfd2257a 690
0bc93a2f 691This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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692is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
693descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{wait} is
694called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
695until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{wait} should be
0bc93a2f 696protected using cancellation handlers.
dfd2257a 697@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
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698@end deftypefun
699
28f540f4 700@deftypefun pid_t wait4 (pid_t @var{pid}, int *@var{status-ptr}, int @var{options}, struct rusage *@var{usage})
d08a7e4c 701@standards{BSD, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 702@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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703If @var{usage} is a null pointer, @code{wait4} is equivalent to
704@code{waitpid (@var{pid}, @var{status-ptr}, @var{options})}.
705
706If @var{usage} is not null, @code{wait4} stores usage figures for the
707child process in @code{*@var{rusage}} (but only if the child has
708terminated, not if it has stopped). @xref{Resource Usage}.
709
710This function is a BSD extension.
711@end deftypefun
712
713Here's an example of how to use @code{waitpid} to get the status from
714all child processes that have terminated, without ever waiting. This
715function is designed to be a handler for @code{SIGCHLD}, the signal that
716indicates that at least one child process has terminated.
717
718@smallexample
719@group
720void
721sigchld_handler (int signum)
722@{
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723 int pid, status, serrno;
724 serrno = errno;
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725 while (1)
726 @{
727 pid = waitpid (WAIT_ANY, &status, WNOHANG);
728 if (pid < 0)
729 @{
730 perror ("waitpid");
731 break;
732 @}
733 if (pid == 0)
734 break;
735 notice_termination (pid, status);
736 @}
f9d6455b 737 errno = serrno;
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738@}
739@end group
740@end smallexample
741
742@node Process Completion Status
743@section Process Completion Status
744
745If the exit status value (@pxref{Program Termination}) of the child
746process is zero, then the status value reported by @code{waitpid} or
747@code{wait} is also zero. You can test for other kinds of information
748encoded in the returned status value using the following macros.
749These macros are defined in the header file @file{sys/wait.h}.
750@pindex sys/wait.h
751
28f540f4 752@deftypefn Macro int WIFEXITED (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 753@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 754@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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755This macro returns a nonzero value if the child process terminated
756normally with @code{exit} or @code{_exit}.
757@end deftypefn
758
28f540f4 759@deftypefn Macro int WEXITSTATUS (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 760@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 761@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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762If @code{WIFEXITED} is true of @var{status}, this macro returns the
763low-order 8 bits of the exit status value from the child process.
764@xref{Exit Status}.
765@end deftypefn
766
28f540f4 767@deftypefn Macro int WIFSIGNALED (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 768@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 769@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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770This macro returns a nonzero value if the child process terminated
771because it received a signal that was not handled.
772@xref{Signal Handling}.
773@end deftypefn
774
28f540f4 775@deftypefn Macro int WTERMSIG (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 776@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 777@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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778If @code{WIFSIGNALED} is true of @var{status}, this macro returns the
779signal number of the signal that terminated the child process.
780@end deftypefn
781
28f540f4 782@deftypefn Macro int WCOREDUMP (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 783@standards{BSD, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 784@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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785This macro returns a nonzero value if the child process terminated
786and produced a core dump.
787@end deftypefn
788
28f540f4 789@deftypefn Macro int WIFSTOPPED (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 790@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 791@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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792This macro returns a nonzero value if the child process is stopped.
793@end deftypefn
794
28f540f4 795@deftypefn Macro int WSTOPSIG (int @var{status})
d08a7e4c 796@standards{POSIX.1, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 797@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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798If @code{WIFSTOPPED} is true of @var{status}, this macro returns the
799signal number of the signal that caused the child process to stop.
800@end deftypefn
801
802
803@node BSD Wait Functions
b49ab5f4 804@section BSD Process Wait Function
28f540f4 805
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806@Theglibc{} also provides the @code{wait3} function for compatibility
807with BSD. This function is declared in @file{sys/wait.h}. It is the
808predecessor to @code{wait4}, which is more flexible. @code{wait3} is
809now obsolete.
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810@pindex sys/wait.h
811
b49ab5f4 812@deftypefun pid_t wait3 (int *@var{status-ptr}, int @var{options}, struct rusage *@var{usage})
d08a7e4c 813@standards{BSD, sys/wait.h}
19f5d29c 814@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
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815If @var{usage} is a null pointer, @code{wait3} is equivalent to
816@code{waitpid (-1, @var{status-ptr}, @var{options})}.
817
818If @var{usage} is not null, @code{wait3} stores usage figures for the
819child process in @code{*@var{rusage}} (but only if the child has
820terminated, not if it has stopped). @xref{Resource Usage}.
821@end deftypefun
822
823@node Process Creation Example
824@section Process Creation Example
825
826Here is an example program showing how you might write a function
827similar to the built-in @code{system}. It executes its @var{command}
828argument using the equivalent of @samp{sh -c @var{command}}.
829
830@smallexample
831#include <stddef.h>
832#include <stdlib.h>
833#include <unistd.h>
834#include <sys/types.h>
835#include <sys/wait.h>
836
837/* @r{Execute the command using this shell program.} */
838#define SHELL "/bin/sh"
839
840@group
f65fd747 841int
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842my_system (const char *command)
843@{
844 int status;
845 pid_t pid;
846@end group
847
848 pid = fork ();
849 if (pid == 0)
850 @{
851 /* @r{This is the child process. Execute the shell command.} */
852 execl (SHELL, SHELL, "-c", command, NULL);
853 _exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
854 @}
855 else if (pid < 0)
856 /* @r{The fork failed. Report failure.} */
857 status = -1;
858 else
859 /* @r{This is the parent process. Wait for the child to complete.} */
860 if (waitpid (pid, &status, 0) != pid)
861 status = -1;
862 return status;
863@}
864@end smallexample
865
866@comment Yes, this example has been tested.
867
868There are a couple of things you should pay attention to in this
869example.
870
871Remember that the first @code{argv} argument supplied to the program
872represents the name of the program being executed. That is why, in the
873call to @code{execl}, @code{SHELL} is supplied once to name the program
f65fd747 874to execute and a second time to supply a value for @code{argv[0]}.
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875
876The @code{execl} call in the child process doesn't return if it is
877successful. If it fails, you must do something to make the child
878process terminate. Just returning a bad status code with @code{return}
879would leave two processes running the original program. Instead, the
880right behavior is for the child process to report failure to its parent
881process.
882
883Call @code{_exit} to accomplish this. The reason for using @code{_exit}
884instead of @code{exit} is to avoid flushing fully buffered streams such
885as @code{stdout}. The buffers of these streams probably contain data
886that was copied from the parent process by the @code{fork}, data that
887will be output eventually by the parent process. Calling @code{exit} in
888the child would output the data twice. @xref{Termination Internals}.