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Full Discussion: Questions about IPC
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Questions about IPC Post 303012046 by jim mcnamara on Sunday 28th of January 2018 12:59:45 PM
Old 01-28-2018
You have assumptions you may not realize that you have.

When a parent creates a child
1. if the child "stays" as a child it can communicate to the parent via pipes, shared memory - ipc in general is possible. Sometimes the child stdout is the parent's same stdout (shared) with the parent. There no requirement that it be done one way or another. The parent should call wait() on the child process and then take correct action depending on the return from the child (exit()).

2. The child calls setsid() and becomes the head of its very own process. It can still talk to the parent if it is coded to do that, but when the process ends, the parent has gone on to do other things and had not called wait() on the child.

3. a daemon is a special version of #2. The child turns off connections to stdin, stdout, stderr. These processes are often called services. Normally they do not engage in IPC with the parent.

4. Sometimes a child can be #1, #2, or #3 but it uses signals to/from the parent to interoperate.

Shells mostly use #1 - you type the ls command, it does it's thing, writes to stdout, then calls exit. The status of the child is available to the parent shell in the $? variable.

I've simplified this for understanding. Someone else may not feel my choices were the best. In any event - You should really consider learning what https://www.tldp.org/LDP/tlk/ipc/ipc.html has to say. And learn it reasonably well.
 

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FORK(2) 							System Calls Manual							   FORK(2)

NAME
fork - create a new process SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <unistd.h> pid_t fork(void) DESCRIPTION
Fork causes creation of a new process. The new process (child process) is an exact copy of the calling process except for the following: The child process has a unique process ID. The child process has a different parent process ID (i.e., the process ID of the parent process). The child process has its own copy of the parent's descriptors. These descriptors reference the same underlying objects, so that, for instance, file pointers in file objects are shared between the child and the parent, so that an lseek(2) on a descriptor in the child process can affect a subsequent read or write by the parent. This descriptor copying is also used by the shell to establish standard input and output for newly created processes as well as to set up pipes. The child starts with no pending signals and an inactive alarm timer. RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, fork returns a value of 0 to the child process and returns the process ID of the child process to the parent process. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned to the parent process, no child process is created, and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
Fork will fail and no child process will be created if one or more of the following are true: [EAGAIN] The system-imposed limit on the total number of processes under execution would be exceeded. This limit is configuration- dependent. (The kernel variable NR_PROCS in <minix/config.h> (Minix), or <minix/const.h> (Minix-vmd).) [ENOMEM] There is insufficient (virtual) memory for the new process. SEE ALSO
execve(2), wait(2). 3rd Berkeley Distribution May 22, 1986 FORK(2)
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