glenda.party
term% ls -F
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$home/manuals/9front/2/fork
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FORK(2)                       System Calls Manual                      FORK(2)

NAME
       fork, rfork - manipulate process resources

SYNOPSIS
       #include <u.h>
       #include <libc.h>

       int fork(void)

       int rfork(int flags)

DESCRIPTION
       Forking  is the only way new processes are created.  The flags argument
       to rfork selects which resources of the invoking process  (parent)  are
       shared  by the new process (child) or initialized to their default val‐
       ues.  The resources include the file name space, the open file descrip‐
       tor table (which, when shared, permits  processes  to  open  and  close
       files  for  other  processes),  the  set  of environment variables (see
       env(3)), the note group (the set of processes that receive notes  writ‐
       ten to a member's notepg file; see proc(3)), the set of rendezvous tags
       (see  rendezvous(2));  and open files.  Flags is the logical OR of some
       subset of

       RFPROC If set a new process is created; otherwise  changes  affect  the
              current process.

       RFNOWAIT
              If  set,  the child process will be dissociated from the parent.
              Upon exit the child will leave no Waitmsg (see wait(2)) for  the
              parent to collect.

       RFNAMEG
              If  set,  the  new  process inherits a copy of the parent's name
              space; otherwise the new process shares the parent's name space.
              Is mutually exclusive with RFCNAMEG.

       RFCNAMEG
              If set, the new process starts with a clean name  space.  A  new
              name  space  must be built from a mount of an open file descrip‐
              tor.  Is mutually exclusive with RFNAMEG.

       RFNOMNT
              If set, subsequent mounts into the new name space  and  derefer‐
              encing of pathnames starting with # are disallowed.

       RFENVG If  set, the environment variables are copied; otherwise the two
              processes share environment variables.   Is  mutually  exclusive
              with RFCENVG.

       RFCENVG
              If  set,  the  new process starts with an empty environment.  Is
              mutually exclusive with RFENVG.

       RFNOTEG
              Each process is a member of a group of processes  that  all  re‐
              ceive  notes when a note is written to any of their notepg files
              (see proc(3)).  The group of a new process  is  by  default  the
              same  as  its  parent,  but if RFNOTEG is set (regardless of RF‐
              PROC), the process becomes the first in a  new  group,  isolated
              from previous processes.

       RFFDG  If  set,  the  invoker's file descriptor table (see intro(2)) is
              copied; otherwise the two processes share a single table.

       RFCFDG If set, the new process starts with a clean file descriptor  ta‐
              ble.  Is mutually exclusive with RFFDG.

       RFREND If  set, the process will be unable to rendezvous(2) with any of
              its ancestors; its children will, however, be able to rendezvous
              with it.  In effect, RFREND makes the process  the  first  in  a
              group of processes that share a space for rendezvous tags.

       RFMEM  If  set,  the  child and the parent will share data and bss seg‐
              ments.  Otherwise, the child inherits a copy of those  segments.
              Other segment types, in particular stack segments, will be unaf‐
              fected.  May be set only with RFPROC.

       File  descriptors in a shared file descriptor table are kept open until
       either they are explicitly closed or all processes  sharing  the  table
       exit.

       If  RFPROC  is  set,  the  value  returned in the parent process is the
       process id of the child process; the value returned  in  the  child  is
       zero.   Without  RFPROC,  the  return value is zero.  Process ids range
       from 1 to the maximum integer (int) value.  Rfork will sleep, if neces‐
       sary, until required process resources are available.

       Fork is just a call of rfork(RFFDG|RFREND|RFPROC).

SOURCE
       /sys/src/libc/9syscall
       /sys/src/libc/9sys/fork.c

SEE ALSO
       intro(2), proc(3),

DIAGNOSTICS
       These functions set errstr.

                                                                       FORK(2)