getty: don't accept ancient '#' and '@' as backspace/kill line,
it only confuses people. (Alexander Griesser <alexander.griesser@lkh-vil.or.at> (LKH Villach)) various other cleanups. function old new delta getty_main 2526 2546 +20 static.baud_index 4 - -4 parse_speeds 91 - -91 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ (add/remove: 0/2 grow/shrink: 1/0 up/down: 20/-95) Total: -75 bytes text data bss dec hex filename 773152 1086 9008 783246 bf38e busybox_old 773081 1086 9008 783175 bf347 busybox_unstripped
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docs/ctty.htm
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN">
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<html><head>
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||||
<!-- saved from http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/lk/lk-10.html -->
|
||||
<meta name="GENERATOR" content="SGML-Tools 1.0.9"><title>The Linux kernel: Processes</title>
|
||||
</head>
|
||||
<body>
|
||||
<hr>
|
||||
<h2><a name="s10">10. Processes</a></h2>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Before looking at the Linux implementation, first a general Unix
|
||||
description of threads, processes, process groups and sessions.
|
||||
</p><p>A session contains a number of process groups, and a process group
|
||||
contains a number of processes, and a process contains a number
|
||||
of threads.
|
||||
</p><p>A session can have a controlling tty.
|
||||
At most one process group in a session can be a foreground process group.
|
||||
An interrupt character typed on a tty ("Teletype", i.e., terminal)
|
||||
causes a signal to be sent to all members of the foreground process group
|
||||
in the session (if any) that has that tty as controlling tty.
|
||||
</p><p>All these objects have numbers, and we have thread IDs, process IDs,
|
||||
process group IDs and session IDs.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h2><a name="ss10.1">10.1 Processes</a>
|
||||
</h2>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Creation</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>A new process is traditionally started using the <code>fork()</code>
|
||||
system call:
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>pid_t p;
|
||||
|
||||
p = fork();
|
||||
if (p == (pid_t) -1)
|
||||
/* ERROR */
|
||||
else if (p == 0)
|
||||
/* CHILD */
|
||||
else
|
||||
/* PARENT */
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
<p>This creates a child as a duplicate of its parent.
|
||||
Parent and child are identical in almost all respects.
|
||||
In the code they are distinguished by the fact that the parent
|
||||
learns the process ID of its child, while <code>fork()</code>
|
||||
returns 0 in the child. (It can find the process ID of its
|
||||
parent using the <code>getppid()</code> system call.)
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Termination</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Normal termination is when the process does
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>exit(n);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
or
|
||||
<blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>return n;
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
from its <code>main()</code> procedure. It returns the single byte <code>n</code>
|
||||
to its parent.
|
||||
<p>Abnormal termination is usually caused by a signal.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Collecting the exit code. Zombies</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The parent does
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>pid_t p;
|
||||
int status;
|
||||
|
||||
p = wait(&status);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
and collects two bytes:
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
<figure>
|
||||
<eps file="absent">
|
||||
<img src="ctty_files/exit_status.png">
|
||||
</eps>
|
||||
</figure></p><p>A process that has terminated but has not yet been waited for
|
||||
is a <i>zombie</i>. It need only store these two bytes:
|
||||
exit code and reason for termination.
|
||||
</p><p>On the other hand, if the parent dies first, <code>init</code> (process 1)
|
||||
inherits the child and becomes its parent.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Signals</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Stopping</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Some signals cause a process to stop:
|
||||
<code>SIGSTOP</code> (stop!),
|
||||
<code>SIGTSTP</code> (stop from tty: probably ^Z was typed),
|
||||
<code>SIGTTIN</code> (tty input asked by background process),
|
||||
<code>SIGTTOU</code> (tty output sent by background process, and this was
|
||||
disallowed by <code>stty tostop</code>).
|
||||
</p><p>Apart from ^Z there also is ^Y. The former stops the process
|
||||
when it is typed, the latter stops it when it is read.
|
||||
</p><p>Signals generated by typing the corresponding character on some tty
|
||||
are sent to all processes that are in the foreground process group
|
||||
of the session that has that tty as controlling tty. (Details below.)
|
||||
</p><p>If a process is being traced, every signal will stop it.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Continuing</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p><code>SIGCONT</code>: continue a stopped process.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Terminating</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p><code>SIGKILL</code> (die! now!),
|
||||
<code>SIGTERM</code> (please, go away),
|
||||
<code>SIGHUP</code> (modem hangup),
|
||||
<code>SIGINT</code> (^C),
|
||||
<code>SIGQUIT</code> (^\), etc.
|
||||
Many signals have as default action to kill the target.
|
||||
(Sometimes with an additional core dump, when such is
|
||||
allowed by rlimit.)
|
||||
The signals <code>SIGCHLD</code> and <code>SIGWINCH</code>
|
||||
are ignored by default.
|
||||
All except <code>SIGKILL</code> and <code>SIGSTOP</code> can be
|
||||
caught or ignored or blocked.
|
||||
For details, see <code>signal(7)</code>.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h2><a name="ss10.2">10.2 Process groups</a>
|
||||
</h2>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Every process is member of a unique <i>process group</i>,
|
||||
identified by its <i>process group ID</i>.
|
||||
(When the process is created, it becomes a member of the process group
|
||||
of its parent.)
|
||||
By convention, the process group ID of a process group
|
||||
equals the process ID of the first member of the process group,
|
||||
called the <i>process group leader</i>.
|
||||
A process finds the ID of its process group using the system call
|
||||
<code>getpgrp()</code>, or, equivalently, <code>getpgid(0)</code>.
|
||||
One finds the process group ID of process <code>p</code> using
|
||||
<code>getpgid(p)</code>.
|
||||
</p><p>One may use the command <code>ps j</code> to see PPID (parent process ID),
|
||||
PID (process ID), PGID (process group ID) and SID (session ID)
|
||||
of processes. With a shell that does not know about job control,
|
||||
like <code>ash</code>, each of its children will be in the same session
|
||||
and have the same process group as the shell. With a shell that knows
|
||||
about job control, like <code>bash</code>, the processes of one pipeline. like
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>% cat paper | ideal | pic | tbl | eqn | ditroff > out
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
form a single process group.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Creation</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>A process <code>pid</code> is put into the process group <code>pgid</code> by
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>setpgid(pid, pgid);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
If <code>pgid == pid</code> or <code>pgid == 0</code> then this creates
|
||||
a new process group with process group leader <code>pid</code>.
|
||||
Otherwise, this puts <code>pid</code> into the already existing
|
||||
process group <code>pgid</code>.
|
||||
A zero <code>pid</code> refers to the current process.
|
||||
The call <code>setpgrp()</code> is equivalent to <code>setpgid(0,0)</code>.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Restrictions on setpgid()</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The calling process must be <code>pid</code> itself, or its parent,
|
||||
and the parent can only do this before <code>pid</code> has done
|
||||
<code>exec()</code>, and only when both belong to the same session.
|
||||
It is an error if process <code>pid</code> is a session leader
|
||||
(and this call would change its <code>pgid</code>).
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Typical sequence</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>p = fork();
|
||||
if (p == (pid_t) -1) {
|
||||
/* ERROR */
|
||||
} else if (p == 0) { /* CHILD */
|
||||
setpgid(0, pgid);
|
||||
...
|
||||
} else { /* PARENT */
|
||||
setpgid(p, pgid);
|
||||
...
|
||||
}
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
This ensures that regardless of whether parent or child is scheduled
|
||||
first, the process group setting is as expected by both.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Signalling and waiting</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>One can signal all members of a process group:
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>killpg(pgrp, sig);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
<p>One can wait for children in ones own process group:
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>waitpid(0, &status, ...);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
or in a specified process group:
|
||||
<blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>waitpid(-pgrp, &status, ...);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Foreground process group</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Among the process groups in a session at most one can be
|
||||
the <i>foreground process group</i> of that session.
|
||||
The tty input and tty signals (signals generated by ^C, ^Z, etc.)
|
||||
go to processes in this foreground process group.
|
||||
</p><p>A process can determine the foreground process group in its session
|
||||
using <code>tcgetpgrp(fd)</code>, where <code>fd</code> refers to its
|
||||
controlling tty. If there is none, this returns a random value
|
||||
larger than 1 that is not a process group ID.
|
||||
</p><p>A process can set the foreground process group in its session
|
||||
using <code>tcsetpgrp(fd,pgrp)</code>, where <code>fd</code> refers to its
|
||||
controlling tty, and <code>pgrp</code> is a process group in the
|
||||
its session, and this session still is associated to the controlling
|
||||
tty of the calling process.
|
||||
</p><p>How does one get <code>fd</code>? By definition, <code>/dev/tty</code>
|
||||
refers to the controlling tty, entirely independent of redirects
|
||||
of standard input and output. (There is also the function
|
||||
<code>ctermid()</code> to get the name of the controlling terminal.
|
||||
On a POSIX standard system it will return <code>/dev/tty</code>.)
|
||||
Opening the name of the
|
||||
controlling tty gives a file descriptor <code>fd</code>.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Background process groups</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>All process groups in a session that are not foreground
|
||||
process group are <i>background process groups</i>.
|
||||
Since the user at the keyboard is interacting with foreground
|
||||
processes, background processes should stay away from it.
|
||||
When a background process reads from the terminal it gets
|
||||
a SIGTTIN signal. Normally, that will stop it, the job control shell
|
||||
notices and tells the user, who can say <code>fg</code> to continue
|
||||
this background process as a foreground process, and then this
|
||||
process can read from the terminal. But if the background process
|
||||
ignores or blocks the SIGTTIN signal, or if its process group
|
||||
is orphaned (see below), then the read() returns an EIO error,
|
||||
and no signal is sent. (Indeed, the idea is to tell the process
|
||||
that reading from the terminal is not allowed right now.
|
||||
If it wouldn't see the signal, then it will see the error return.)
|
||||
</p><p>When a background process writes to the terminal, it may get
|
||||
a SIGTTOU signal. May: namely, when the flag that this must happen
|
||||
is set (it is off by default). One can set the flag by
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>% stty tostop
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
and clear it again by
|
||||
<blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>% stty -tostop
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
and inspect it by
|
||||
<blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>% stty -a
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
Again, if TOSTOP is set but the background process ignores or blocks
|
||||
the SIGTTOU signal, or if its process group is orphaned (see below),
|
||||
then the write() returns an EIO error, and no signal is sent.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Orphaned process groups</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The process group leader is the first member of the process group.
|
||||
It may terminate before the others, and then the process group is
|
||||
without leader.
|
||||
</p><p>A process group is called <i>orphaned</i> when <i>the
|
||||
parent of every member is either in the process group
|
||||
or outside the session</i>.
|
||||
In particular, the process group of the session leader
|
||||
is always orphaned.
|
||||
</p><p>If termination of a process causes a process group to become
|
||||
orphaned, and some member is stopped, then all are sent first SIGHUP
|
||||
and then SIGCONT.
|
||||
</p><p>The idea is that perhaps the parent of the process group leader
|
||||
is a job control shell. (In the same session but a different
|
||||
process group.) As long as this parent is alive, it can
|
||||
handle the stopping and starting of members in the process group.
|
||||
When it dies, there may be nobody to continue stopped processes.
|
||||
Therefore, these stopped processes are sent SIGHUP, so that they
|
||||
die unless they catch or ignore it, and then SIGCONT to continue them.
|
||||
</p><p>Note that the process group of the session leader is already
|
||||
orphaned, so no signals are sent when the session leader dies.
|
||||
</p><p>Note also that a process group can become orphaned in two ways
|
||||
by termination of a process: either it was a parent and not itself
|
||||
in the process group, or it was the last element of the process group
|
||||
with a parent outside but in the same session.
|
||||
Furthermore, that a process group can become orphaned
|
||||
other than by termination of a process, namely when some
|
||||
member is moved to a different process group.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h2><a name="ss10.3">10.3 Sessions</a>
|
||||
</h2>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Every process group is in a unique <i>session</i>.
|
||||
(When the process is created, it becomes a member of the session
|
||||
of its parent.)
|
||||
By convention, the session ID of a session
|
||||
equals the process ID of the first member of the session,
|
||||
called the <i>session leader</i>.
|
||||
A process finds the ID of its session using the system call
|
||||
<code>getsid()</code>.
|
||||
</p><p>Every session may have a <i>controlling tty</i>,
|
||||
that then also is called the controlling tty of each of
|
||||
its member processes.
|
||||
A file descriptor for the controlling tty is obtained by
|
||||
opening <code>/dev/tty</code>. (And when that fails, there was no
|
||||
controlling tty.) Given a file descriptor for the controlling tty,
|
||||
one may obtain the SID using <code>tcgetsid(fd)</code>.
|
||||
</p><p>A session is often set up by a login process. The terminal
|
||||
on which one is logged in then becomes the controlling tty
|
||||
of the session. All processes that are descendants of the
|
||||
login process will in general be members of the session.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Creation</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>A new session is created by
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>pid = setsid();
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
This is allowed only when the current process is not a process group leader.
|
||||
In order to be sure of that we fork first:
|
||||
<blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>p = fork();
|
||||
if (p) exit(0);
|
||||
pid = setsid();
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
The result is that the current process (with process ID <code>pid</code>)
|
||||
becomes session leader of a new session with session ID <code>pid</code>.
|
||||
Moreover, it becomes process group leader of a new process group.
|
||||
Both session and process group contain only the single process <code>pid</code>.
|
||||
Furthermore, this process has no controlling tty.
|
||||
<p>The restriction that the current process must not be a process group leader
|
||||
is needed: otherwise its PID serves as PGID of some existing process group
|
||||
and cannot be used as the PGID of a new process group.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Getting a controlling tty</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>How does one get a controlling terminal? Nobody knows,
|
||||
this is a great mystery.
|
||||
</p><p>The System V approach is that the first tty opened by the process
|
||||
becomes its controlling tty.
|
||||
</p><p>The BSD approach is that one has to explicitly call
|
||||
</p><blockquote>
|
||||
<pre>ioctl(fd, TIOCSCTTY, ...);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
</blockquote>
|
||||
|
||||
to get a controlling tty.
|
||||
<p>Linux tries to be compatible with both, as always, and this
|
||||
results in a very obscure complex of conditions. Roughly:
|
||||
</p><p>The <code>TIOCSCTTY</code> ioctl will give us a controlling tty,
|
||||
provided that (i) the current process is a session leader,
|
||||
and (ii) it does not yet have a controlling tty, and
|
||||
(iii) maybe the tty should not already control some other session;
|
||||
if it does it is an error if we aren't root, or we steal the tty
|
||||
if we are all-powerful.
|
||||
</p><p>Opening some terminal will give us a controlling tty,
|
||||
provided that (i) the current process is a session leader, and
|
||||
(ii) it does not yet have a controlling tty, and
|
||||
(iii) the tty does not already control some other session, and
|
||||
(iv) the open did not have the <code>O_NOCTTY</code> flag, and
|
||||
(v) the tty is not the foreground VT, and
|
||||
(vi) the tty is not the console, and
|
||||
(vii) maybe the tty should not be master or slave pty.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Getting rid of a controlling tty</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>If a process wants to continue as a daemon, it must detach itself
|
||||
from its controlling tty. Above we saw that <code>setsid()</code>
|
||||
will remove the controlling tty. Also the ioctl TIOCNOTTY does this.
|
||||
Moreover, in order not to get a controlling tty again as soon as it
|
||||
opens a tty, the process has to fork once more, to assure that it
|
||||
is not a session leader. Typical code fragment:
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><pre> if ((fork()) != 0)
|
||||
exit(0);
|
||||
setsid();
|
||||
if ((fork()) != 0)
|
||||
exit(0);
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
<p>See also <code>daemon(3)</code>.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h3>Disconnect</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>If the terminal goes away by modem hangup, and the line was not local,
|
||||
then a SIGHUP is sent to the session leader.
|
||||
Any further reads from the gone terminal return EOF.
|
||||
(Or possibly -1 with <code>errno</code> set to EIO.)
|
||||
</p><p>If the terminal is the slave side of a pseudotty, and the master side
|
||||
is closed (for the last time), then a SIGHUP is sent to the foreground
|
||||
process group of the slave side.
|
||||
</p><p>When the session leader dies, a SIGHUP is sent to all processes
|
||||
in the foreground process group. Moreover, the terminal stops being
|
||||
the controlling terminal of this session (so that it can become
|
||||
the controlling terminal of another session).
|
||||
</p><p>Thus, if the terminal goes away and the session leader is
|
||||
a job control shell, then it can handle things for its descendants,
|
||||
e.g. by sending them again a SIGHUP.
|
||||
If on the other hand the session leader is an innocent process
|
||||
that does not catch SIGHUP, it will die, and all foreground processes
|
||||
get a SIGHUP.
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><h2><a name="ss10.4">10.4 Threads</a>
|
||||
</h2>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>A process can have several threads. New threads (with the same PID
|
||||
as the parent thread) are started using the <code>clone</code> system
|
||||
call using the <code>CLONE_THREAD</code> flag. Threads are distinguished
|
||||
by a <i>thread ID</i> (TID). An ordinary process has a single thread
|
||||
with TID equal to PID. The system call <code>gettid()</code> returns the
|
||||
TID. The system call <code>tkill()</code> sends a signal to a single thread.
|
||||
</p><p>Example: a process with two threads. Both only print PID and TID and exit.
|
||||
(Linux 2.4.19 or later.)
|
||||
</p><pre>% cat << EOF > gettid-demo.c
|
||||
#include <unistd.h>
|
||||
#include <sys/types.h>
|
||||
#define CLONE_SIGHAND 0x00000800
|
||||
#define CLONE_THREAD 0x00010000
|
||||
#include <linux/unistd.h>
|
||||
#include <errno.h>
|
||||
_syscall0(pid_t,gettid)
|
||||
|
||||
int thread(void *p) {
|
||||
printf("thread: %d %d\n", gettid(), getpid());
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
main() {
|
||||
unsigned char stack[4096];
|
||||
int i;
|
||||
|
||||
i = clone(thread, stack+2048, CLONE_THREAD | CLONE_SIGHAND, NULL);
|
||||
if (i == -1)
|
||||
perror("clone");
|
||||
else
|
||||
printf("clone returns %d\n", i);
|
||||
printf("parent: %d %d\n", gettid(), getpid());
|
||||
}
|
||||
EOF
|
||||
% cc -o gettid-demo gettid-demo.c
|
||||
% ./gettid-demo
|
||||
clone returns 21826
|
||||
parent: 21825 21825
|
||||
thread: 21826 21825
|
||||
%
|
||||
</pre>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
</p><p>
|
||||
</p><hr>
|
||||
|
||||
</body></html>
|
Reference in New Issue
Block a user