создать новый процесс (create a new process)
Пролог (Prolog)
This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. The
Linux implementation of this interface may differ (consult the
corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior),
or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.
Имя (Name)
fork — create a new process
Синопсис (Synopsis)
#include <unistd.h>
pid_t fork(void);
Описание (Description)
The fork() function shall create a new process. The new process
(child process) shall be an exact copy of the calling process
(parent process) except as detailed below:
* The child process shall have a unique process ID.
* The child process ID also shall not match any active process
group ID.
* The child process shall have a different parent process ID,
which shall be the process ID of the calling process.
* The child process shall have its own copy of the parent's
file descriptors. Each of the child's file descriptors shall
refer to the same open file description with the
corresponding file descriptor of the parent.
* The child process shall have its own copy of the parent's
open directory streams. Each open directory stream in the
child process may share directory stream positioning with the
corresponding directory stream of the parent.
* The child process shall have its own copy of the parent's
message catalog descriptors.
* The child process values of tms_utime, tms_stime, tms_cutime,
and tms_cstime shall be set to 0.
* The time left until an alarm clock signal shall be reset to
zero, and the alarm, if any, shall be canceled; see
alarm(3p).
* All semadj values shall be cleared.
* File locks set by the parent process shall not be inherited
by the child process.
* The set of signals pending for the child process shall be
initialized to the empty set.
* Interval timers shall be reset in the child process.
* Any semaphores that are open in the parent process shall also
be open in the child process.
* The child process shall not inherit any address space memory
locks established by the parent process via calls to
mlockall() or mlock().
* Memory mappings created in the parent shall be retained in
the child process. MAP_PRIVATE mappings inherited from the
parent shall also be MAP_PRIVATE mappings in the child, and
any modifications to the data in these mappings made by the
parent prior to calling fork() shall be visible to the child.
Any modifications to the data in MAP_PRIVATE mappings made by
the parent after fork() returns shall be visible only to the
parent. Modifications to the data in MAP_PRIVATE mappings
made by the child shall be visible only to the child.
* For the SCHED_FIFO and SCHED_RR scheduling policies, the
child process shall inherit the policy and priority settings
of the parent process during a fork() function. For other
scheduling policies, the policy and priority settings on
fork() are implementation-defined.
* Per-process timers created by the parent shall not be
inherited by the child process.
* The child process shall have its own copy of the message
queue descriptors of the parent. Each of the message
descriptors of the child shall refer to the same open message
queue description as the corresponding message descriptor of
the parent.
* No asynchronous input or asynchronous output operations shall
be inherited by the child process. Any use of asynchronous
control blocks created by the parent produces undefined
behavior.
* A process shall be created with a single thread. If a multi-
threaded process calls fork(), the new process shall contain
a replica of the calling thread and its entire address space,
possibly including the states of mutexes and other resources.
Consequently, to avoid errors, the child process may only
execute async-signal-safe operations until such time as one
of the exec functions is called.
When the application calls fork() from a signal handler and
any of the fork handlers registered by pthread_atfork() calls
a function that is not async-signal-safe, the behavior is
undefined.
* If the Trace option and the Trace Inherit option are both
supported:
If the calling process was being traced in a trace stream
that had its inheritance policy set to POSIX_TRACE_INHERITED,
the child process shall be traced into that trace stream, and
the child process shall inherit the parent's mapping of trace
event names to trace event type identifiers. If the trace
stream in which the calling process was being traced had its
inheritance policy set to POSIX_TRACE_CLOSE_FOR_CHILD, the
child process shall not be traced into that trace stream. The
inheritance policy is set by a call to the
posix_trace_attr_setinherited() function.
* If the Trace option is supported, but the Trace Inherit
option is not supported:
The child process shall not be traced into any of the trace
streams of its parent process.
* If the Trace option is supported, the child process of a
trace controller process shall not control the trace streams
controlled by its parent process.
* The initial value of the CPU-time clock of the child process
shall be set to zero.
* The initial value of the CPU-time clock of the single thread
of the child process shall be set to zero.
All other process characteristics defined by POSIX.1‐2008 shall
be the same in the parent and child processes. The inheritance of
process characteristics not defined by POSIX.1‐2008 is
unspecified by POSIX.1‐2008.
After fork(), both the parent and the child processes shall be
capable of executing independently before either one terminates.
Возвращаемое значение (Return value)
Upon successful completion, fork() shall return 0 to the child
process and shall return the process ID of the child process to
the parent process. Both processes shall continue to execute from
the fork() function. Otherwise, -1 shall be returned to the
parent process, no child process shall be created, and errno
shall be set to indicate the error.
Ошибки (Error)
The fork() function shall fail if:
EAGAIN
The system lacked the necessary resources to create
another process, or the system-imposed limit on the total
number of processes under execution system-wide or by a
single user {CHILD_MAX} would be exceeded.
The fork() function may fail if:
ENOMEM
Insufficient storage space is available.
The following sections are informative.
Примеры (Examples)
None.
Использование в приложениях (Application usage)
None.
Обоснование (Rationale)
Many historical implementations have timing windows where a
signal sent to a process group (for example, an interactive
SIGINT) just prior to or during execution of fork() is delivered
to the parent following the fork() but not to the child because
the fork() code clears the child's set of pending signals. This
volume of POSIX.1‐2017 does not require, or even permit, this
behavior. However, it is pragmatic to expect that problems of
this nature may continue to exist in implementations that appear
to conform to this volume of POSIX.1‐2017 and pass available
verification suites. This behavior is only a consequence of the
implementation failing to make the interval between signal
generation and delivery totally invisible. From the
application's perspective, a fork() call should appear atomic. A
signal that is generated prior to the fork() should be delivered
prior to the fork(). A signal sent to the process group after
the fork() should be delivered to both parent and child. The
implementation may actually initialize internal data structures
corresponding to the child's set of pending signals to include
signals sent to the process group during the fork(). Since the
fork() call can be considered as atomic from the application's
perspective, the set would be initialized as empty and such
signals would have arrived after the fork(); see also <signal.h>.
One approach that has been suggested to address the problem of
signal inheritance across fork() is to add an [EINTR]
error,
which would be returned when a signal is detected during the
call. While this is preferable to losing signals, it was not
considered an optimal solution. Although it is not recommended
for this purpose, such an error would be an allowable extension
for an implementation.
The [ENOMEM]
error value is reserved for those implementations
that detect and distinguish such a condition. This condition
occurs when an implementation detects that there is not enough
memory to create the process. This is intended to be returned
when [EAGAIN]
is inappropriate because there can never be enough
memory (either primary or secondary storage) to perform the
operation. Since fork() duplicates an existing process, this must
be a condition where there is sufficient memory for one such
process, but not for two. Many historical implementations
actually return [ENOMEM]
due to temporary lack of memory, a case
that is not generally distinct from [EAGAIN]
from the perspective
of a conforming application.
Part of the reason for including the optional error [ENOMEM]
is
because the SVID specifies it and it should be reserved for the
error condition specified there. The condition is not applicable
on many implementations.
IEEE Std 1003.1‐1988 neglected to require concurrent execution of
the parent and child of fork(). A system that single-threads
processes was clearly not intended and is considered an
unacceptable ``toy implementation'' of this volume of
POSIX.1‐2017. The only objection anticipated to the phrase
``executing independently'' is testability, but this assertion
should be testable. Such tests require that both the parent and
child can block on a detectable action of the other, such as a
write to a pipe or a signal. An interactive exchange of such
actions should be possible for the system to conform to the
intent of this volume of POSIX.1‐2017.
The [EAGAIN]
error exists to warn applications that such a
condition might occur. Whether it occurs or not is not in any
practical sense under the control of the application because the
condition is usually a consequence of the user's use of the
system, not of the application's code. Thus, no application can
or should rely upon its occurrence under any circumstances, nor
should the exact semantics of what concept of ``user'' is used be
of concern to the application developer. Validation writers
should be cognizant of this limitation.
There are two reasons why POSIX programmers call fork(). One
reason is to create a new thread of control within the same
program (which was originally only possible in POSIX by creating
a new process); the other is to create a new process running a
different program. In the latter case, the call to fork() is soon
followed by a call to one of the exec functions.
The general problem with making fork() work in a multi-threaded
world is what to do with all of the threads. There are two
alternatives. One is to copy all of the threads into the new
process. This causes the programmer or implementation to deal
with threads that are suspended on system calls or that might be
about to execute system calls that should not be executed in the
new process. The other alternative is to copy only the thread
that calls fork(). This creates the difficulty that the state of
process-local resources is usually held in process memory. If a
thread that is not calling fork() holds a resource, that resource
is never released in the child process because the thread whose
job it is to release the resource does not exist in the child
process.
When a programmer is writing a multi-threaded program, the first
described use of fork(), creating new threads in the same
program, is provided by the pthread_create() function. The fork()
function is thus used only to run new programs, and the effects
of calling functions that require certain resources between the
call to fork() and the call to an exec function are undefined.
The addition of the forkall() function to the standard was
considered and rejected. The forkall() function lets all the
threads in the parent be duplicated in the child. This
essentially duplicates the state of the parent in the child. This
allows threads in the child to continue processing and allows
locks and the state to be preserved without explicit
pthread_atfork() code. The calling process has to ensure that the
threads processing state that is shared between the parent and
child (that is, file descriptors or MAP_SHARED memory) behaves
properly after forkall(). For example, if a thread is reading a
file descriptor in the parent when forkall() is called, then two
threads (one in the parent and one in the child) are reading the
file descriptor after the forkall(). If this is not desired
behavior, the parent process has to synchronize with such threads
before calling forkall().
While the fork() function is async-signal-safe, there is no way
for an implementation to determine whether the fork handlers
established by pthread_atfork() are async-signal-safe. The fork
handlers may attempt to execute portions of the implementation
that are not async-signal-safe, such as those that are protected
by mutexes, leading to a deadlock condition. It is therefore
undefined for the fork handlers to execute functions that are not
async-signal-safe when fork() is called from a signal handler.
When forkall() is called, threads, other than the calling thread,
that are in functions that can return with an [EINTR]
error may
have those functions return [EINTR]
if the implementation cannot
ensure that the function behaves correctly in the parent and
child. In particular, pthread_cond_wait() and
pthread_cond_timedwait() need to return in order to ensure that
the condition has not changed. These functions can be awakened
by a spurious condition wakeup rather than returning [EINTR]
.
Будущие направления (Future directions)
None.
Смотри также (See also)
alarm(3p), exec(1p), fcntl(3p),
posix_trace_attr_getinherited(3p), posix_trace_eventid_equal(3p),
pthread_atfork(3p), semop(3p), signal(3p), times(3p)
The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Section 4.12, Memory
Synchronization, sys_types.h(0p), unistd.h(0p)