NAME
wait, waitid, waitpid, wait3, wait4, wait6 — wait for processes to change statusLIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h>#include <sys/wait.h> pid_t
wait(int *status); pid_t
waitpid(pid_t wpid, int *status, int options); #include <signal.h> int
waitid(idtype_t idtype, id_t id, siginfo_t *info, int options); #include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/resource.h> pid_t
wait3(int *status, int options, struct rusage *rusage); pid_t
wait4(pid_t wpid, int *status, int options, struct rusage *rusage); pid_t
wait6(idtype_t idtype, id_t id, int *status, int options, struct __wrusage *wrusage, siginfo_t *infop);
DESCRIPTION
The wait() function suspends execution of its calling thread until status information is available for a child process or a signal is received. On return from a successful wait() call, the status area contains information about the process that reported a status change as defined below. The wait4() and wait6() system calls provide a more general interface for programs that need to wait for specific child processes, that need resource utilization statistics accumulated by child processes, or that require options. The other wait functions are implemented using either wait4() or wait6(). The wait6() function is the most general function in this family and its distinct features are: All of the desired process statuses to be waited on must be explicitly specified in options. The wait(), waitpid(), wait3(), and wait4() functions all implicitly wait for exited and trapped processes, but the waitid() and wait6() functions require the correspondingWEXITED
and WTRAPPED
flags to be explicitly
specified. This allows waiting for processes which have experienced other
status changes without having to also handle the exit status from terminated
processes.
The wait6() function accepts a
wrusage argument which points to a structure
defined as:
struct __wrusage { struct rusage wru_self; struct rusage wru_children; };
NULL
.
The last argument infop must be either
NULL
or a pointer to a
siginfo_t structure. If
non-NULL
, the structure is filled with the
same data as for a SIGCHLD
signal delivered
when the process changed state.
The set of child processes to be queried is specified by the arguments
idtype and
id. The separate
idtype and
id arguments support many other types of
identifiers in addition to process IDs and process group IDs.
- If idtype is
P_PID
, waitid() and wait6() wait for the child process with a process ID equal to(pid_t)id
. - If idtype is
P_PGID
, waitid() and wait6() wait for the child process with a process group ID equal to(pid_t)id
. - If idtype is
P_ALL
, waitid() and wait6() wait for any child process and theid
is ignored. - If idtype is
P_PID
orP_PGID
and theid
is zero, waitid() and wait6() wait for any child process in the same process group as the caller.
P_UID
- Wait for processes whose effective user ID is equal to
(uid_t)
id. P_GID
- Wait for processes whose effective group ID is equal to
(gid_t)
id. P_SID
- Wait for processes whose session ID is equal to id. If the child process started its own session, its session ID will be the same as its process ID. Otherwise the session ID of a child process will match the caller's session ID.
P_JAILID
- Waits for processes within a jail whose jail identifier is equal to id.
- If wpid is -1, the call waits for any child process.
- If wpid is 0, the call waits for any child process in the process group of the caller.
- If wpid is greater than zero, the call waits for the process with process ID wpid.
- If wpid is less than -1, the call waits for any process whose process group ID equals the absolute value of wpid.
WCONTINUED
- Report the status of selected processes that have continued
from a job control stop by receiving a
SIGCONT
signal. WNOHANG
- Do not block when there are no processes wishing to report status.
WUNTRACED
- Report the status of selected processes which are stopped
due to a
SIGTTIN
,SIGTTOU
,SIGTSTP
, orSIGSTOP
signal. WSTOPPED
- An alias for
WUNTRACED
. WTRAPPED
- Report the status of selected processes which are being
traced via ptrace(2) and have trapped or
reached a breakpoint. This flag is implicitly set for the functions
wait(),
waitpid(),
wait3(), and
wait4().
WEXITED
- Report the status of selected processes which have
terminated. This flag is implicitly set for the functions
wait(),
waitpid(),
wait3(), and
wait4().
WNOWAIT
- Keep the process whose status is returned in a waitable state. The process may be waited for again after this call completes.
WEXITED
,
WUNTRACED
,
WSTOPPED
,
WTRAPPED
, or
WCONTINUED
must be specified. Otherwise
there will be no events for the call to report. To avoid hanging indefinitely
in such a case these functions return -1 with
errno
set to
EINVAL
.
If rusage is non-NULL, a summary of the
resources used by the terminated process and all its children is returned.
If wrusage is non-NULL, separate summaries are
returned for the resources used by the terminated process and the resources
used by all its children.
If infop is non-NULL, a
siginfo_t
structure is returned with the
si_signo field set to
SIGCHLD
and the
si_pid field set to the process ID of the
process reporting status. For the exited process, the
si_status field of the
siginfo_t
structure contains the full 32
bit exit status passed to _exit(2); the
status argument of other calls only returns 8
lowest bits of the exit status.
When the WNOHANG
option is specified and no
processes wish to report status, waitid() sets
the si_signo and
si_pid fields in
infop to zero. Checking these fields is the
only way to know if a status change was reported.
When the WNOHANG
option is specified and no
processes wish to report status, wait4() and
wait6() return a process id of 0.
The wait() call is the same as
wait4() with a
wpid value of -1, with an
options value of zero, and a
rusage value of
NULL
. The
waitpid() function is identical to
wait4() with an
rusage value of
NULL
. The older
wait3() call is the same as
wait4() with a
wpid value of -1. The
wait4() function is identical to
wait6() with the flags
WEXITED
and
WTRAPPED
set in
options and
infop set to
NULL
.
The following macros may be used to test the current status of the process.
Exactly one of the following four macros will evaluate to a non-zero (true)
value:
- WIFCONTINUED(status)
- True if the process has not terminated, and has continued
after a job control stop. This macro can be true only if the wait call
specified the
WCONTINUED
option. - WIFEXITED(status)
- True if the process terminated normally by a call to _exit(2) or exit(3).
- WIFSIGNALED(status)
- True if the process terminated due to receipt of a signal.
- WIFSTOPPED(status)
- True if the process has not terminated, but has stopped and
can be restarted. This macro can be true only if the wait call specified
the
WUNTRACED
option or if the child process is being traced (see ptrace(2)).
- WEXITSTATUS(status)
- If WIFEXITED(status) is true, evaluates to the low-order 8 bits of the argument passed to _exit(2) or exit(3) by the child.
- WTERMSIG(status)
- If WIFSIGNALED(status) is true, evaluates to the number of the signal that caused the termination of the process.
- WCOREDUMP(status)
- If WIFSIGNALED(status) is true, evaluates as true if the termination of the process was accompanied by the creation of a core file containing an image of the process when the signal was received.
- WSTOPSIG(status)
- If WIFSTOPPED(status) is true, evaluates to the number of the signal that caused the process to stop.
NOTES
See sigaction(2) for a list of termination signals. A status of 0 indicates normal termination. If a parent process terminates without waiting for all of its child processes to terminate, the remaining child processes are re-assigned to the reaper of the exiting process as the parent, see procctl(2)PROC_REAP_ACQUIRE
. If no specific reaper
was assigned, the process with ID 1, the init process, becomes the parent of
the orphaned children by default.
If a signal is caught while any of the wait() calls
are pending, the call may be interrupted or restarted when the signal-catching
routine returns, depending on the options in effect for the signal; see
discussion of SA_RESTART
in
sigaction(2).
The implementation queues one SIGCHLD
signal
for each child process whose status has changed; if
wait() returns because the status of a child
process is available, the pending SIGCHLD signal associated with the process
ID of the child process will be discarded. Any other pending
SIGCHLD
signals remain pending.
If SIGCHLD
is blocked and
wait() returns because the status of a child
process is available, the pending SIGCHLD
signal will be cleared unless another status of the child process is
available.
RETURN VALUES
If wait() returns due to a stopped, continued, or terminated child process, the process ID of the child is returned to the calling process. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error. If wait6(), wait4(), wait3(), or waitpid() returns due to a stopped, continued, or terminated child process, the process ID of the child is returned to the calling process. If there are no children not previously awaited, -1 is returned with errno set toECHILD
. Otherwise, if
WNOHANG
is specified and there are no
stopped, continued or exited children, 0 is returned. If an error is detected
or a caught signal aborts the call, a value of -1 is returned and
errno is set to indicate the error.
If waitid() returns because one or more processes
have a state change to report, 0 is returned. If an error is detected, a value
of -1 is returned and errno is set to
indicate the error. If WNOHANG
is specified
and there are no stopped, continued or exited children, 0 is returned. The
si_signo and
si_pid fields of
infop must be checked against zero to
determine if a process reported status.
The wait() family of functions will not return a
child process created with pdfork(2) unless
specifically directed to do so by specifying its process ID.
ERRORS
The wait() function will fail and return immediately if:- [
ECHILD
] - The calling process has no existing unwaited-for child processes.
- [
ECHILD
] - No status from the terminated child process is available
because the calling process has asked the system to discard such status by
ignoring the signal
SIGCHLD
or setting the flagSA_NOCLDWAIT
for that signal. - [
EFAULT
] - The status or rusage argument points to an illegal address. (May not be detected before exit of a child process.)
- [
EINTR
] - The call was interrupted by a caught signal, or the signal
did not have the
SA_RESTART
flag set. - [
EINVAL
] - An invalid value was specified for options, or idtype and id do not specify a valid set of processes.
SEE ALSO
_exit(2), procctl(2), ptrace(2), sigaction(2), exit(3), siginfo(3)STANDARDS
The wait(), waitpid(), and waitid() functions are defined by POSIX; wait6(), wait4(), and wait3() are not specified by POSIX. The WCOREDUMP() macro is an extension to the POSIX interface. The ability to use theWNOWAIT
flag with
waitpid() is an extension; POSIX only permits
this flag with waitid().
HISTORY
The wait() function appeared in Version 1 AT&T UNIX.August 11, 2019 | Debian |