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Mail Archives: cygwin/2003/12/17/12:28:01

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Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 12:27:28 -0500
From: Christopher Faylor <cgf-no-personal-reply-please AT cygwin DOT com>
To: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com
Subject: Re: kill(pid, 0) issue
Message-ID: <20031217172728.GB12975@redhat.com>
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References: <E087F7025D7E494B8015119695CEDB4C0209B0BF AT zpl02exm01 DOT mpsc DOT mot DOT com>
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Reply-To: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com

On Wed, Dec 17, 2003 at 05:23:20PM +0100, Nowakowski Maciej-AMN011 wrote:
>My application creates additional process using fork() function.
>Created child process listens on a socket and exits when it receives
>anything.  The main process checks the child PID using kill(pid, 0)
>with child PID as a parameter.  Even when the child has exited this
>function call returns 0.  When I have supplied any PID which hasn't
>ever existed it's fine and kill(non-existentPID, 0) returns -1.
>
>Has anyone experienced something like this?

This seems like a perfect place for a simple test case.  For instance:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>

int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
  int pid;
  if (argv[1])
    pid = atoi(argv[1]);
  else if ((pid = fork ()) == 0)
    {
      puts ("forking a process and then exiting");
      exit (0);
    }
  else
    {
      int dummy;
      wait (&dummy);
    }
  printf ("%d = kill (%d, 0)\n", kill (pid, 0), pid);
  exit (0);
}

I tried the above with no argument and with an argument of a previously
forked-and-exited process.  Both cases produced the expected result, as
did trying this on a running process.

I suspect that you are not 'wait()'ing for the process to exit before
checking if it exists.  kill(pid, 0) will succeed on both linux and cygwin
if the process is not reaped by calling wait (or waitpid, etc.) first.

cgf

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