table of contents
PDFORK(2) | System Calls Manual | PDFORK(2) |
NAME¶
pdfork
, pdgetpid
,
pdkill
, pdwait4
—
System calls to manage process descriptors
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/procdesc.h>
pid_t
pdfork
(int
*fdp, int
flags);
int
pdgetpid
(int
fd, pid_t
*pidp);
int
pdkill
(int
fd, int
signum);
int
pdwait4
(int
fd, int *status,
int options,
struct rusage
*rusage);
DESCRIPTION¶
Process descriptors are special file descriptors that represent
processes, and are created using
pdfork
(),
a variant of fork(2), which, if successful, returns a
process descriptor in the integer pointed to by fdp.
Processes created via pdfork
() will not cause
SIGCHLD
on termination.
pdfork
() can accept the flags:
PD_DAEMON
- Instead of the default terminate-on-close behaviour, allow the process to
live until it is explicitly killed with kill(2).
This option is not permitted in capsicum(4) capability mode (see cap_enter(2)).
PD_CLOEXEC
- Set close-on-exec on process descriptor.
pdgetpid
()
queries the process ID (PID) in the process descriptor
fd.
pdkill
()
is functionally identical to kill(2), except that it
accepts a process descriptor, fd, rather than a
PID.
pdwait4
()
behaves identically to wait4(2), but operates with respect
to a process descriptor argument rather than a PID.
The following system calls also have effects specific to process descriptors:
fstat(2) queries status of a process descriptor; currently only the st_mode, st_birthtime, st_atime, st_ctime and st_mtime fields are defined. If the owner read, write, and execute bits are set then the process represented by the process descriptor is still alive.
poll(2) and select(2) allow
waiting for process state transitions; currently only
POLLHUP
is defined, and will be raised when the
process dies. Process state transitions can also be monitored using
kqueue(2) filter EVFILT_PROCDESC
;
currently only NOTE_EXIT
is implemented.
close(2) will close the process descriptor
unless PD_DAEMON
is set; if the process is still
alive and this is the last reference to the process descriptor, the process
will be terminated with the signal SIGKILL
.
RETURN VALUES¶
pdfork
() returns a PID, 0 or -1, as
fork(2) does.
pdgetpid
() and
pdkill
() return 0 on success and -1 on failure.
pdwait4
() returns a PID on success and -1
on failure.
ERRORS¶
These functions may return the same error numbers as their
PID-based equivalents (e.g. pdfork
() may return the
same error numbers as fork(2)), with the following
additions:
- [
EINVAL
] - The signal number given to
pdkill
() is invalid. - [
ENOTCAPABLE
] - The process descriptor being operated on has insufficient rights (e.g.
CAP_PDKILL
forpdkill
()).
SEE ALSO¶
close(2), fork(2), fstat(2), kill(2), poll(2), wait4(2), capsicum(4), procdesc(4)
HISTORY¶
The pdfork
(),
pdgetpid
(), pdkill
() and
pdwait4
() system calls first appeared in
FreeBSD 9.0.
Support for process descriptors mode was developed as part of the TrustedBSD Project.
AUTHORS¶
These functions and the capability facility were created by Robert N. M. Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org> and Jonathan Anderson <jonathan@FreeBSD.org> at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory with support from a grant from Google, Inc.
BUGS¶
pdwait4
() has not yet been
implemented.
June 8, 2016 | Debian |