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Top Forums Programming alternatives of exec() system function Post 302155089 by porter on Thursday 3rd of January 2008 12:50:35 AM
Old 01-03-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Raj Kumar Arora
So anybody if have any alternative to exec() or fork()-exec() pair of system function questions then please reply.
fork and exec are two of the most fundamental calls on a UNIX system, if these are failing the system won't work.

Any alternative, such as "system()" or "popen()" will call fork()/vfork() and exec(), there is not really any other portable way to start a new process and launch a new program in it.

I suggest the errors are in the usage or understanding of what these calls do.

Admittedly, Linux has clone() but that's another story.
 

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stdarg(3)						     Library Functions Manual							 stdarg(3)

NAME
stdarg - Handles a variable-length parameter list LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc.so, libc.a) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdarg.h> va_list void va_start ( va_list argp, parmN ); type va_arg ( va_list argp, type ); void va_end ( va_list argp ); PARAMETERS
argp Specifies a variable that the stdarg macros use to keep track of the current location in the parameter list. Do not modify this variable. parmN Specifies the last named parameter (the one just before the "..." in the execl() definition in the Example section). There must be at least one named parameter. type Specifies the type to which the expected argument will be converted when passed as an argument. Unsigned char or short arguments are converted to unsigned int, and float arguments are converted to double. Different types can be mixed, but it is up to the rou- tine to know what type of argument is expected because the type cannot be determined at run time. DESCRIPTION
The stdarg set of macros allows you to write portable functions that accept a variable number of parameters. Subroutines that have vari- able-length parameter lists (such as the printf() function), but that do not use the stdarg macros, are inherently nonportable because dif- ferent systems use different parameter-passing conventions. The stdarg macros are as follows: va_list Defines the type of the variable used to traverse the list. va_start() Initializes argp to point to the first unnamed argument. The va_start() macro will be invoked before any access to the unnamed arguments. va_arg() Returns the next parameter in the list pointed to by argp. va_end() Cleans up at the end. Your function can traverse, or scan, the parameter list more than once. Start each traversal with a call to va_start() and end it with va_end(). EXAMPLE
The following example is a possible implementation of the execl() function: #include <stdarg.h> #define MAXargS 100 /* ** execl is called by ** execl(file, arg1, arg2, . . . , (char *) 0); */ execl(char * file, . . .) { va_list ap; char *file; char *args[MAXargS]; int argno = 0; va_start(ap, file); while ((args[argno++] = va_arg(ap, char *)) != (char *) 0) ; /* Empty loop body */ va_end(ap); return (execv(file, args)); } NOTES
The calling routine is responsible for specifying the number of parameters because it is not always possible to determine this from the stack frame. For example, the execl() function is passed a null pointer to signal the end of the list. The printf() function determines the number of parameters from its fmt parameter. AES Support Level: Temporary use RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: exec(2), printf(3), varargs(3), vprintf(3) delim off stdarg(3)
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