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Full Discussion: fork()ing hell!!
Top Forums Programming fork()ing hell!! Post 14596 by bb666 on Sunday 3rd of February 2002 03:52:13 PM
Old 02-03-2002
Nope, not quite.
I was able to make a father process with more then one child by myself. But what I really want is after creating a number of child prcesses, starting with one of them as a father, it should again fork a few times, thus obtaing a tree-structure of processes.
So I guess I need some kind of recursive algorithm to do that. But here comes the problem: if I fork in a recursive way, I can't seem to get that tree structure right.
And also another problem: using the program shown by Perderabo and also my own, I changed the line:
printf("I am a child process and my pid is %d\n", getpid());
with this one:
printf("I am a child process id=%d father=%d\n",getpid(),getppid());
so I could see if the father is the right one, and after a few forks, all the child processes were generated by the process with pid=1. I avoided that by placing a sleep(2) command right before the end of the program, but I'm wondering: who's this process and is there another way to stop that?
 

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VFORK(2)						      BSD System Calls Manual							  VFORK(2)

NAME
vfork -- spawn new process in a virtual memory efficient way SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> pid_t vfork(void); DESCRIPTION
Vfork() can be used to create new processes without fully copying the address space of the old process, which is horrendously inefficient in a paged environment. It is useful when the purpose of fork(2) would have been to create a new system context for an execve. Vfork() differs from fork in that the child borrows the parent's memory and thread of control until a call to execve(2) or an exit (either by a call to exit(2) or abnormally.) The parent process is suspended while the child is using its resources. Vfork() returns 0 in the child's context and (later) the pid of the child in the parent's context. Vfork() can normally be used just like fork. It does not work, however, to return while running in the childs context from the procedure that called vfork() since the eventual return from vfork() would then return to a no longer existent stack frame. Be careful, also, to call _exit rather than exit if you can't execve, since exit will flush and close standard I/O channels, and thereby mess up the parent processes standard I/O data structures. (Even with fork it is wrong to call exit since buffered data would then be flushed twice.) SEE ALSO
fork(2), execve(2), sigaction(2), wait(2), DIAGNOSTICS
Same as for fork. BUGS
This system call will be eliminated when proper system sharing mechanisms are implemented. Users should not depend on the memory sharing semantics of vfork as it will, in that case, be made synonymous to fork. To avoid a possible deadlock situation, processes that are children in the middle of a vfork() are never sent SIGTTOU or SIGTTIN signals; rather, output or ioctl(2) calls are allowed and input attempts result in an end-of-file indication. HISTORY
The vfork() function call appeared in 3.0BSD. 4th Berkeley Distribution June 4, 1993 4th Berkeley Distribution
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