Various updates and tweaks to the wait(2) manpage.

PR:		docs/183904
Submitted by:	Michael Galassi <michaelgalassi@gmail.com>
Reviewed by:	kib, wblock (earlier version)
This commit is contained in:
John Baldwin 2013-12-03 21:00:13 +00:00
parent b952cd584f
commit d4e3c0a2d7
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-20 02:59:44 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=258891

View file

@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
.\" @(#)wait.2 8.2 (Berkeley) 4/19/94
.\" $FreeBSD$
.\"
.Dd September 7, 2013
.Dd December 3, 2013
.Dt WAIT 2
.Os
.Sh NAME
@ -62,63 +62,76 @@
.Sh DESCRIPTION
The
.Fn wait
function suspends execution of its calling process until
function suspends execution of its calling thread until
.Fa status
information is available for a terminated child process,
information is available for a child process
or a signal is received.
On return from a successful
.Fn wait
call,
the
.Fa status
area contains termination information about the process that exited
area contains information about the process that reported a status change
as defined below.
The
.Fn wait
call is the same as
.Fn wait4
with a
.Fa wpid
value of -1,
with an
.Fa options
value of zero,
and a
.Fa rusage
value of zero.
.Pp
The
.Fn wait4
system call provides a more general interface for programs
that need to wait for certain child processes,
and
.Fn wait6
system calls provide a more general interface for programs
that need to wait for specific child processes,
that need resource utilization statistics accumulated by child processes,
or that require options.
.Pp
The broadest interface of all functions in this family is
.Fn wait6
which is otherwise very much like
The other wait functions are implemented using either
.Fn wait4
but with a few very important distinctions.
To wait for exited processes, the option flag
or
.Fn wait6 .
.Pp
The
.Fn wait6
function is the most general function in this family and its distinct
features are:
.Pp
All of the desired process statuses to be waited on must be explicitly
specified in
.Fa options .
The
.Fn wait ,
.Fn waitpid ,
.Fn wait3 ,
and
.Fn wait4
functions all implicitly wait for exited and trapped processes,
but the
.Fn waitid
and
.Fn wait6
functions require the corresponding
.Dv WEXITED
need to be explicitly specified.
This allows for waiting for processes which have experienced other
status changes without having to handle also the exit status from
the terminated processes.
Instead of the traditional
.Dv rusage
argument, a pointer to a new structure
and
.Dv WTRAPPED
flags to be explicitly specified.
This allows waiting for processes which have experienced other
status changes without having to also handle the exit status from
terminated processes.
.Pp
The
.Fn wait6
function accepts a
.Fa wrusage
argument which points to a structure defined as:
.Bd -literal
struct __wrusage {
struct rusage wru_self;
struct rusage wru_children;
};
.Ed
can be passed.
.Pp
This allows the calling process to collect resource usage statistics
from both its own child process as well as from its grand children.
When no resource usage statistics are needed this pointer can be
.Dv NULL .
.Pp
The last argument
.Fa infop
must be either
@ -126,11 +139,13 @@ must be either
or a pointer to a
.Fa siginfo_t
structure.
When specified, the structure is filled the same as for
.Dv SIGNCHLD
signal, delivered at the process state change.
.br
The process, which state is queried, is specified by two arguments
If
.Pf non- Dv NULL ,
the structure is filled with the same data as for a
.Dv SIGCHLD
signal delivered when the process changed state.
.Pp
The set of child processes to be queried is specified by the arguments
.Fa idtype
and
.Fa id .
@ -138,8 +153,8 @@ The separate
.Fa idtype
and
.Fa id
arguments allows to support many other types of
IDs as well in addition to PID and PGID.
arguments support many other types of
identifers in addition to process IDs and process group IDs.
.Bl -bullet -offset indent
.It
If
@ -188,50 +203,33 @@ and
wait for any child process in the same process group as the caller.
.El
.Pp
Non-standard specifiers for the process to wait for, supported by this
Non-standard identifier types supported by this
implementation of
.Fn waitid
and
.Fn wait6 ,
.Fn wait6
are:
.Bl -bullet -offset indent
.It
The
.Fa idtype
value
.Dv P_UID
waits for processes which effective UID is equal to
.Dv (uid_t)id .
.It
The
.Fa idtype
value
.Dv P_GID
waits for processes which effective GID is equal to
.Dv (gid_t)id .
.It
The
.Fa idtype
value
.Dv P_SID
waits for processes which session ID is equal to
.Dv id .
In case the child process started its own new session,
SID will be the same as its own PID.
Otherwise the SID of a child process will match the caller's SID.
.It
The
.Fa idtype
value
.Dv P_JAILID
waits for processes within a jail which jail identifier is equal
to
.Dv id .
.Bl -tag -width P_JAILID
.It Dv P_UID
Wait for processes whose effective user ID is equal to
.Dv (uid_t) Fa id .
.It Dv P_GID
Wait for processes whose effective group ID is equal to
.Dv (gid_t) Fa id .
.It Dv P_SID
Wait for processes whose session ID is equal to
.Fa id .
.\" This is just how sessions work, not sure this needs to be documented here
If the child process started its own session,
its session ID will be the same as its process ID.
Otherwise the session ID of a child process will match the caller's session ID.
.It Dv P_JAILID
Waits for processes within a jail whose jail identifier is equal to
.Fa id .
.El
.Pp
For
.Fn wait ,
.Fn wait3 ,
For the
.Fn waitpid
and
.Fn wait4
functions, the single
@ -250,12 +248,12 @@ the call waits for any child process in the process group of the caller.
.It
If
.Fa wpid
is greater than zero, the call waits for the process with process id
is greater than zero, the call waits for the process with process ID
.Fa wpid .
.It
If
.Fa wpid
is less than -1, the call waits for any process whose process group id
is less than -1, the call waits for any process whose process group ID
equals the absolute value of
.Fa wpid .
.El
@ -267,30 +265,28 @@ argument is defined below.
The
.Fa options
argument contains the bitwise OR of any of the following options.
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.Bl -tag -width WCONTINUED
.It Dv WCONTINUED
indicates that children of the current process that
have continued from a job control stop, by receiving a
Report the status of selected processes that
have continued from a job control stop by receiving a
.Dv SIGCONT
signal, should also have their status reported.
signal.
.It Dv WNOHANG
is used to indicate that the call should not block when
Do not block when
there are no processes wishing to report status.
.It Dv WUNTRACED
indicates that children of the current process which are stopped
due to a
Report the status of selected processes which are stopped due to a
.Dv SIGTTIN , SIGTTOU , SIGTSTP ,
or
.Dv SIGSTOP
signal shall have their status reported.
signal.
.It Dv WSTOPPED
is an alias for
An alias for
.Dv WUNTRACED .
.It Dv WTRAPPED
allows waiting for processes which have trapped or reached a breakpoint.
.It Dv WEXITED
indicates that the caller is wants to receive status reports from
terminated processes.
Report the status of selected processes which are being traced via
.Xr ptrace 2
and have trapped or reached a breakpoint.
This flag is implicitly set for the functions
.Fn wait ,
.Fn waitpid ,
@ -302,11 +298,27 @@ For the
.Fn waitid
and
.Fn wait6
functions, the flag has to be explicitly included in the
.Fa options ,
functions, the flag has to be explicitly included in
.Fa options
if status reports from trapped processes are expected.
.It Dv WEXITED
Report the status of selected processes which have terminated.
This flag is implicitly set for the functions
.Fn wait ,
.Fn waitpid ,
.Fn wait3 ,
and
.Fn wait4 .
.br
For the
.Fn waitid
and
.Fn wait6
functions, the flag has to be explicitly included in
.Fa options
if status reports from terminated processes are expected.
.It Dv WNOWAIT
keeps the process whose status is returned in a waitable state.
Keep the process whose status is returned in a waitable state.
The process may be waited for again after this call completes.
.El
.sp
@ -336,50 +348,68 @@ process and all its children is returned.
.Pp
If
.Fa wrusage
argument is non-NULL, a resource usage statistics
from both its own child process as well as from its grand children
is returned.
is non-NULL, separate summaries are returned for the resources used
by the terminated process and the resources used by all its children.
.Pp
If
.Fa infop
is non-NULL, it must point to a
is non-NULL, a
.Dv siginfo_t
structure which is filled on return such that the
.Dv si_signo
field is always
structure is returned with the
.Fa si_signo
field set to
.Dv SIGCHLD
and the field
.Dv si_pid
if be non-zero, if there is a status change to report.
If there are no status changes to report and WNOHANG is applied,
both of these fields are returned zero.
When using the
.Fn waitid
function with the
and the
.Fa si_pid
field set to the process ID of the process reporting status.
.Pp
When the
.Dv WNOHANG
option set, checking these fields is the only way to know whether
there were any status changes to report, because the return value
from
option is specified and no processes
wish to report status,
.Fn waitid
is be zero as it is for any successful return from
.Fn waitid .
sets the
.Fa si_signo
and
.Fa si_pid
fields in
.Fa infop
to zero.
Checking these fields is the only way to know if a status change was reported.
.Pp
When the
.Dv WNOHANG
option is specified and no processes
wish to report status,
.Fn wait4
returns a
and
.Fn wait6
return a
process id
of 0.
.Pp
The
.Fn wait
call is the same as
.Fn wait4
with a
.Fa wpid
value of -1,
with an
.Fa options
value of zero,
and a
.Fa rusage
value of
.Dv NULL .
The
.Fn waitpid
function is identical to
.Fn wait4
with an
.Fa rusage
value of zero.
value of
.Dv NULL .
The older
.Fn wait3
call is the same as
@ -388,29 +418,31 @@ with a
.Fa wpid
value of -1.
The
.Fn wait4
function is identical to
.Fn wait6
call, with the bits
with the flags
.Dv WEXITED
and
.Dv WTRAPPED
set in the
set in
.Fa options
and with
and
.Fa infop
set to
.Dv NULL ,
is similar to
.Fn wait4 .
.Dv NULL .
.Pp
The following macros may be used to test the manner of exit of the process.
One of the first four macros will evaluate to a non-zero (true) value:
The following macros may be used to test the current status of the process.
Exactly one of the following four macros will evaluate to a non-zero
.Pq true
value:
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.It Fn WIFCONTINUED status
True if the process has not terminated, and
has continued after a job control stop.
This macro can be true only if the wait call specified the
.Dv WCONTINUED
option).
option.
.It Fn WIFEXITED status
True if the process terminated normally by a call to
.Xr _exit 2
@ -481,7 +513,7 @@ in
The implementation queues one
.Dv SIGCHLD
signal for each child process whose
status has changed, if
status has changed; if
.Fn wait
returns because the status of a child process is available, the pending
SIGCHLD signal associated with the process ID of the child process will
@ -492,7 +524,7 @@ signals remain pending.
.Pp
If
.Dv SIGCHLD
is blocked,
is blocked and
.Fn wait
returns because the status of a child process is available, the pending
.Dv SIGCHLD
@ -538,13 +570,23 @@ If
.Fn waitid
returns because one or more processes have a state change to report,
0 is returned.
To indicate an error, -1 will be returned and
.Dv errno
set to an appropriate value.
If an error is detected,
a value of -1
is returned and
.Va errno
is set to indicate the error.
If
.Dv WNOHANG
was used, 0 can be returned indicating no error, but no processes
may have changed state either, if si_signo and/or si_pid are zero.
is specified and there are
no stopped, continued or exited children,
0 is returned.
The
.Fa si_signo
and
.Fa si_pid
fields of
.Fa infop
must be checked against zero to determine if a process reported status.
.Sh ERRORS
The
.Fn wait
@ -620,7 +662,7 @@ requires
.Fn waitid
to return the full 32 bits passed to
.Xr _exit 2 ;
this implementation only returns 8 bits like in the other calls.
this implementation only returns 8 bits like the other calls.
.Sh HISTORY
The
.Fn wait