The fork
function is the primitive for creating a process. It is declared in the header file `unistd.h'.
fork
function creates a new process.
If the operation is successful, there are then both parent and child processes and both see fork
return, but with different values: it returns a value of 0
in the child process and returns the child's process ID in the parent process.
If process creation failed, fork
returns a value of -1
in the parent process. The following errno
error conditions are defined for fork
:
EAGAIN
RLIMIT_NPROC
resource limit, which can usually be increased; see Limits on Resources.
ENOMEM
The specific attributes of the child process that differ from the parent process are:
The child process has its own unique process ID.
The parent process ID of the child process is the process ID of its parent process.
The child process gets its own copies of the parent process's open file descriptors. Subsequently changing attributes of the file descriptors in the parent process won't affect the file descriptors in the child, and vice versa. See Control Operations. However, the file position associated with each descriptor is shared by both processes; see File Position.
The elapsed processor times for the child process are set to zero; see Processor Time.
The child doesn't inherit file locks set by the parent process. See Control Operations.
The child doesn't inherit alarms set by the parent process. See Setting an Alarm.
The set of pending signals (see Delivery of Signal) for the child process is cleared. (The child process inherits its mask of blocked signals and signal actions from the parent process.)
vfork
function is similar to fork
but on systems it is more efficient; however, there are restrictions you must follow to use it safely.
While fork
makes a complete copy of the calling process's address space and allows both the parent and child to execute independently, vfork
does not make this copy. Instead, the child process created with vfork
shares its parent's address space until it calls exits or one of the exec
functions. In the meantime, the parent process suspends execution.
You must be very careful not to allow the child process created with vfork
to modify any global data or even local variables shared with the parent. Furthermore, the child process cannot return from (or do a long jump out of) the function that called vfork
! This would leave the parent process's control information very confused. If in doubt, use fork
instead.
Some operating systems don't really implement vfork
. The GNU C library permits you to use vfork
on all systems, but actually executes fork
if vfork
isn't available. If you follow the proper precautions for using vfork
, your program will still work even if the system uses fork
instead.