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I know that pthread_kill requires Signal as a parameter but I am just curious about that what will be happen if I will give 0 as a signal (no SIGUSR1 or any other) .
Thread will be still killed in above situation ?
I am trying to learn these stuffs I am putting my hands in threading in C.
It will happen exactly what is described in the man page :
If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed.
That means it will act like pthread_kill has send the signal, but without sending it. It's usefull when you try to check wether a particular PID respond to signal or not. It's a "dry-run".
Edit : Well, out of habit I've writted "PID", but it's more the "TreadId" than any other things.
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As we know that exec family function calls eventually calls execve() which is a system call and remaining are library functions. So, typically, whatever implications applies on execve() are true for other exec*() functions as well.
I would like to know if, during execution of execve(), all signals are blocked until it succeed, or if there is a way to pass signal to that pid which corresponds to exec? (I know it does not return on success and further execution of calling function does not happen)
I am not sure I got your question right, so feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
But, basically, yes, system calls can be considered as 'atomic' from the process point of view. So, once the execve() system call is started, only the kernel has the hand on it and it won't release the process until running the new command or failing with an error code or raise the SIGKILL signal (as SIGKILL is the only unblockable signal).
But, once the execve() spawned a new process (and returned from the kernel), it is perfectly interruptible with any signal.
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I am building a very tiny shell in c,
I have the option on running programs in the background.
I keep a list of all my jobs meaning all the ones in the bg.
Now if i want to go and update this list, how can i check is a process is finished or if its still running.
ps
if i waited with waitpid for some process, will i still be able to check if the process is done? (i mean if i used waitpid it took the process of zombie state.
You should be able to call waitpid, passing it the process id and the WNOHANG option and call the WIFEXITED macro on the integer returned through status argument. See Just check status process in c.
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What is a practical relevance of signals in C programs ?
Where do we need signals. I am getting confused and feeling traped in this topic, Who generates signals ?
Signals are a lightweight way for processes to communicate with each other asynchronously; as such, it shouldn't be a surprise that processes generate signals.
Signals are in C because signals were how you communicated with a process in the original version of UNIX.
They are a fairly simple way of allowing your process to respond to external requests such as "re-read my config file", for example.
The K&R chapter is a good intro, but read the C standard to see the minimum for what is defined. In particular, the only portable thing you can do in a signal handler is either abort the process, or set an atomic flag which your main thread of execution will check in due course. In practice, people do more complicated things in signal handlers such as making system calls.
Signals provide a way of supporting asynchronous interrupts in a C program. That said, the C spec is almost completely void of specified behavior for signals, leaving them essentially entirely up to the implementation, so writing portable code that uses signals is almost impossible. You need to carefully read the documentation for your implementation to see what exactly signals can do.
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I am trying to add instrumentation into my code that will print out something like
'Thread 1 forks Thread 2'
Any suggestions on how I can achieve this?
Terminology correction: one thread may create another thread, not fork, which is usually
used to mention one process forking another.
No, a thread has no way to get another thread's identifier. On Linux, you can check if gettid() == getpid() to find if it's the main thread. Solaris has thr_main() to identify if the caller is main thread or not. FreeBSD has pthread_main_np() for the same purpose.
But there's no way to identify parent-child relationship between any threads. Any thread can create more threads. You'll have to use pass the thread identifiers around when creating threads or use global data structure to maintain this information.
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How do i know that a process [not called by c] has exited and based on that do something in C?
For eg. there is a running application , say notepad. I create an application to delete the text file created by it. I cannot do that while it is open . So how do I know when notepad exits and based on that take a decision in C.,.,
If you know the PID of the process, you can use the kill() function. Sending signal 0 to the process is guaranteed not to kill it, but merely to report on whether it is running.
If you don't know the PID of the process, there is often a pidfile on disk for the process concerned (e.g. /var/run/processname.pid) - look at the file that starts it for more information. If this PID file is not there, the process should not be running. If it is there, the file contains (as text) the PID of the process, which you can check using the method above.
If you do not know the PID of the process and it does not have a PID file, then you will have to walk /proc, or shell out to pgrep or similar. Avoid this if possible.