1POSIX_SPAWN(3P)            POSIX Programmer's Manual           POSIX_SPAWN(3P)
2
3
4

PROLOG

6       This  manual  page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux
7       implementation of this interface may differ (consult the  corresponding
8       Linux  manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the interface may
9       not be implemented on Linux.
10

NAME

12       posix_spawn, posix_spawnp - spawn a process (ADVANCED REALTIME)
13

SYNOPSIS

15       #include <spawn.h>
16
17       int posix_spawn(pid_t *restrict pid, const char *restrict path,
18              const posix_spawn_file_actions_t *file_actions,
19              const posix_spawnattr_t *restrict attrp,
20              char *const argv[restrict], char *const envp[restrict]);
21       int posix_spawnp(pid_t *restrict pid, const char *restrict file,
22              const posix_spawn_file_actions_t *file_actions,
23              const posix_spawnattr_t *restrict attrp,
24              char *const argv[restrict], char * const envp[restrict]);
25
26

DESCRIPTION

28       The posix_spawn() and  posix_spawnp()  functions  shall  create  a  new
29       process  (child  process)  from  the  specified  process image. The new
30       process image shall be  constructed  from  a  regular  executable  file
31       called the new process image file.
32
33       When  a  C  program is executed as the result of this call, it shall be
34       entered as a C-language function call as follows:
35
36
37              int main(int argc, char *argv[]);
38
39       where argc is the argument count and argv  is  an  array  of  character
40       pointers  to the arguments themselves. In addition, the following vari‐
41       able:
42
43
44              extern char **environ;
45
46       shall be initialized as a pointer to an array of character pointers  to
47       the environment strings.
48
49       The  argument argv is an array of character pointers to null-terminated
50       strings. The last member of this array shall be a null pointer  and  is
51       not  counted in argc. These strings constitute the argument list avail‐
52       able to the new process image. The value in argv[0] should point  to  a
53       filename that is associated with the process image being started by the
54       posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() function.
55
56       The argument envp is an array of character pointers to  null-terminated
57       strings.  These  strings constitute the environment for the new process
58       image. The environment array is terminated by a null pointer.
59
60       The number of bytes available for the child process' combined  argument
61       and environment lists is {ARG_MAX}. The implementation shall specify in
62       the  system  documentation  (see  the  Base   Definitions   volume   of
63       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,  Chapter  2,  Conformance) whether any list over‐
64       head, such as length words, null terminators,  pointers,  or  alignment
65       bytes, is included in this total.
66
67       The  path  argument  to posix_spawn() is a pathname that identifies the
68       new process image file to execute.
69
70       The file parameter to posix_spawnp() shall be used to construct a path‐
71       name  that identifies the new process image file. If the file parameter
72       contains a slash character, the file parameter shall  be  used  as  the
73       pathname for the new process image file. Otherwise, the path prefix for
74       this file shall be obtained by a search of the  directories  passed  as
75       the  environment  variable  PATH  (see  the  Base Definitions volume of
76       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 8, Environment Variables). If this  envi‐
77       ronment  variable  is not defined, the results of the search are imple‐
78       mentation-defined.
79
80       If file_actions is a null pointer, then file descriptors  open  in  the
81       calling  process  shall  remain  open  in the child process, except for
82       those whose close-on- exec flag FD_CLOEXEC is set  (see  fcntl()).  For
83       those  file  descriptors that remain open, all attributes of the corre‐
84       sponding open file descriptions, including file  locks  (see  fcntl()),
85       shall remain unchanged.
86
87       If  file_actions  is  not  NULL,  then the file descriptors open in the
88       child process shall be those open in the calling process as modified by
89       the  spawn  file  actions  object  pointed  to  by file_actions and the
90       FD_CLOEXEC flag of each remaining open file descriptor after the  spawn
91       file  actions  have  been processed.  The effective order of processing
92       the spawn file actions shall be:
93
94        1. The set of open file descriptors for the child process  shall  ini‐
95           tially  be  the  same  set  as is open for the calling process. All
96           attributes of the corresponding open file  descriptions,  including
97           file locks (see fcntl()), shall remain unchanged.
98
99        2. The signal mask, signal default actions, and the effective user and
100           group IDs for the child process shall be changed  as  specified  in
101           the attributes object referenced by attrp.
102
103        3. The  file  actions specified by the spawn file actions object shall
104           be performed in the order in which they were  added  to  the  spawn
105           file actions object.
106
107        4. Any file descriptor that has its FD_CLOEXEC flag set (see fcntl() )
108           shall be closed.
109
110       The posix_spawnattr_t  spawn  attributes  object  type  is  defined  in
111       <spawn.h>. It shall contain at least the attributes defined below.
112
113       If  the  POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP flag is set in the spawn-flags attribute
114       of the object referenced by attrp, and the  spawn-pgroup  attribute  of
115       the same object is non-zero, then the child's process group shall be as
116       specified in the spawn-pgroup attribute of  the  object  referenced  by
117       attrp.
118
119       As  a  special  case,  if  the POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP flag is set in the
120       spawn-flags attribute of the object referenced by attrp, and the spawn-
121       pgroup  attribute  of  the  same  object is set to zero, then the child
122       shall be in a new process group with a process group ID  equal  to  its
123       process ID.
124
125       If  the  POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP  flag  is  not  set  in  the spawn-flags
126       attribute of the object referenced by  attrp,  the  new  child  process
127       shall inherit the parent's process group.
128
129       If  the  POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHEDPARAM  flag  is  set  in  the  spawn-flags
130       attribute of the object referenced by attrp, but  POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHED‐
131       ULER  is not set, the new process image shall initially have the sched‐
132       uling policy of the calling  process  with  the  scheduling  parameters
133       specified in the spawn-schedparam attribute of the object referenced by
134       attrp.
135
136       If  the  POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHEDULER  flag  is  set  in  the   spawn-flags
137       attribute  of the object referenced by attrp (regardless of the setting
138       of the POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHEDPARAM flag), the  new  process  image  shall
139       initially have the scheduling policy specified in the spawn-schedpolicy
140       attribute of the object referenced by attrp and the scheduling  parame‐
141       ters specified in the spawn-schedparam attribute of the same object.
142
143       The  POSIX_SPAWN_RESETIDS  flag  in  the  spawn-flags  attribute of the
144       object referenced by attrp governs the effective user ID of  the  child
145       process.  If  this flag is not set, the child process shall inherit the
146       parent process' effective user ID. If  this  flag  is  set,  the  child
147       process' effective user ID shall be reset to the parent's real user ID.
148       In either case, if the set-user-ID mode bit of the  new  process  image
149       file  is  set,  the effective user ID of the child process shall become
150       that file's owner ID before the new process image begins execution.
151
152       The POSIX_SPAWN_RESETIDS flag  in  the  spawn-flags  attribute  of  the
153       object  referenced  by attrp also governs the effective group ID of the
154       child process. If this flag is not set, the child process shall inherit
155       the  parent process' effective group ID. If this flag is set, the child
156       process' effective group ID shall be reset to the parent's  real  group
157       ID.  In  either  case,  if the set-group-ID mode bit of the new process
158       image file is set, the effective group ID of the  child  process  shall
159       become  that file's group ID before the new process image begins execu‐
160       tion.
161
162       If the POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGMASK flag is set in the spawn-flags  attribute
163       of  the  object  referenced by attrp, the child process shall initially
164       have the signal mask specified in the spawn-sigmask  attribute  of  the
165       object referenced by attrp.
166
167       If  the  POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGDEF flag is set in the spawn-flags attribute
168       of the object referenced by attrp, the signals specified in the  spawn-
169       sigdefault  attribute  of the same object shall be set to their default
170       actions in the child process. Signals set to the default action in  the
171       parent process shall be set to the default action in the child process.
172
173       Signals  set  to  be  caught by the calling process shall be set to the
174       default action in the child process.
175
176       Except for SIGCHLD, signals set to be ignored by  the  calling  process
177       image shall be set to be ignored by the child process, unless otherwise
178       specified by the POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGDEF flag being  set  in  the  spawn-
179       flags attribute of the object referenced by attrp and the signals being
180       indicated in the spawn-sigdefault attribute of the object referenced by
181       attrp.
182
183       If  the  SIGCHLD signal is set to be ignored by the calling process, it
184       is unspecified whether the SIGCHLD signal is set to be  ignored  or  to
185       the  default action in the child process, unless otherwise specified by
186       the POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGDEF flag being set in the  spawn_flags  attribute
187       of  the  object  referenced by attrp and the SIGCHLD signal being indi‐
188       cated in the spawn_sigdefault attribute of  the  object  referenced  by
189       attrp.
190
191       If  the value of the attrp pointer is NULL, then the default values are
192       used.
193
194       All process attributes, other than those influenced by  the  attributes
195       set in the object referenced by attrp as specified above or by the file
196       descriptor manipulations specified in file_actions, shall appear in the
197       new  process  image  as though fork() had been called to create a child
198       process and then a member of the exec  family  of  functions  had  been
199       called by the child process to execute the new process image.
200
201       It  is  implementation-defined  whether  the fork handlers are run when
202       posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() is called.
203

RETURN VALUE

205       Upon successful  completion,  posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp()  shall
206       return  the  process  ID of the child process to the parent process, in
207       the variable pointed to by a non-NULL pid argument,  and  shall  return
208       zero as the function return value. Otherwise, no child process shall be
209       created, the value stored into the variable pointed to  by  a  non-NULL
210       pid  is unspecified, and an error number shall be returned as the func‐
211       tion return value to indicate the error. If the pid argument is a  null
212       pointer, the process ID of the child is not returned to the caller.
213

ERRORS

215       The posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() functions may fail if:
216
217       EINVAL The value specified by file_actions or attrp is invalid.
218
219
220       If  this  error  occurs  after the calling process successfully returns
221       from the posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() function,  the  child  process
222       may exit with exit status 127.
223
224       If  posix_spawn()  or  posix_spawnp()  fail for any of the reasons that
225       would cause fork() or one of the exec family of functions to  fail,  an
226       error  value shall be returned as described by fork() and exec, respec‐
227       tively (or, if the error occurs after the calling process  successfully
228       returns, the child process shall exit with exit status 127).
229
230       If  POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP  is  set  in the spawn-flags attribute of the
231       object referenced by attrp, and posix_spawn() or  posix_spawnp()  fails
232       while  changing  the  child's  process  group,  an error value shall be
233       returned as described by setpgid() (or, if the error occurs  after  the
234       calling process successfully returns, the child process shall exit with
235       exit status 127).
236
237       If POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHEDPARAM is set and POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHEDULER is not
238       set  in  the  spawn-flags  attribute of the object referenced by attrp,
239       then if posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() fails for any  of  the  reasons
240       that  would  cause  sched_setparam()  to  fail, an error value shall be
241       returned as described by sched_setparam()  (or,  if  the  error  occurs
242       after the calling process successfully returns, the child process shall
243       exit with exit status 127).
244
245       If POSIX_SPAWN_SETSCHEDULER is set in the spawn-flags attribute of  the
246       object  referenced  by  attrp,  and  if posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp()
247       fails for any of the reasons that would cause  sched_setscheduler()  to
248       fail,  an error value shall be returned as described by sched_setsched‐
249       uler() (or, if the error occurs after the calling process  successfully
250       returns, the child process shall exit with exit status 127).
251
252       If  the  file_actions  argument  is  not NULL, and specifies any close,
253       dup2, or  open  actions  to  be  performed,  and  if  posix_spawn()  or
254       posix_spawnp()  fails  for any of the reasons that would cause close(),
255       dup2(), or open()  to  fail,  an  error  value  shall  be  returned  as
256       described  by  close(),  dup2(),  and  open(), respectively (or, if the
257       error occurs after the calling process successfully returns, the  child
258       process  shall  exit with exit status 127). An open file action may, by
259       itself, result in any of the errors described by close() or dup2(),  in
260       addition to those described by open().
261
262       The following sections are informative.
263

EXAMPLES

265       None.
266

APPLICATION USAGE

268       These  functions  are part of the Spawn option and need not be provided
269       on all implementations.
270

RATIONALE

272       The posix_spawn() function and its close relation  posix_spawnp()  have
273       been  introduced  to overcome the following perceived difficulties with
274       fork(): the fork() function is difficult  or  impossible  to  implement
275       without swapping or dynamic address translation.
276
277        * Swapping is generally too slow for a realtime environment.
278
279        * Dynamic  address  translation is not available everywhere that POSIX
280          might be useful.
281
282        * Processes are too useful to simply option out of POSIX  whenever  it
283          must run without address translation or other MMU services.
284
285       Thus,  POSIX  needs process creation and file execution primitives that
286       can be efficiently implemented without address translation or other MMU
287       services.
288
289       The  posix_spawn()  function is implementable as a library routine, but
290       both posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() are  designed  as  kernel  opera‐
291       tions.  Also,  although  they  may be an efficient replacement for many
292       fork()/ exec pairs, their goal is to provide  useful  process  creation
293       primitives for systems that have difficulty with fork(), not to provide
294       drop-in replacements for fork()/ exec.
295
296       This view of the role of posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp()  influenced
297       the  design of their API. It does not attempt to provide the full func‐
298       tionality of fork()/ exec in which arbitrary user-specified  operations
299       of any sort are permitted between the creation of the child process and
300       the execution of the new process image; any attempt to reach that level
301       would  need  to  provide a programming language as parameters. Instead,
302       posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() are process creation  primitives  like
303       the  Start_Process and Start_Process_Search Ada language bindings pack‐
304       age POSIX_Process_Primitives and also like those in many operating sys‐
305       tems that are not UNIX systems, but with some POSIX-specific additions.
306
307       To  achieve  its  coverage goals, posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() have
308       control of six types of inheritance: file  descriptors,  process  group
309       ID, user and group ID, signal mask, scheduling, and whether each signal
310       ignored in the parent will remain ignored in the child, or be reset  to
311       its default action in the child.
312
313       Control of file descriptors is required to allow an independently writ‐
314       ten child process image to access data streams opened by and even  gen‐
315       erated  or  read by the parent process without being specifically coded
316       to know which parent files and file descriptors are to be used. Control
317       of  the  process group ID is required to control how the child process'
318       job control relates to that of the parent.
319
320       Control of the signal mask and signal defaulting is sufficient to  sup‐
321       port  the  implementation of system(). Although support for system() is
322       not explicitly one of the goals for posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp(),
323       it is covered under the "at least 50%" coverage goal.
324
325       The  intention  is  that  the normal file descriptor inheritance across
326       fork(), the subsequent effect of the specified spawn file actions,  and
327       the normal file descriptor inheritance across one of the exec family of
328       functions should fully specify open file inheritance.  The  implementa‐
329       tion  need make no decisions regarding the set of open file descriptors
330       when the child process image begins execution, those  decisions  having
331       already  been  made by the caller and expressed as the set of open file
332       descriptors and their FD_CLOEXEC flags at the time of the call and  the
333       spawn  file  actions object specified in the call. We have been assured
334       that in cases where the POSIX Start_Process Ada  primitives  have  been
335       implemented  in  a  library, this method of controlling file descriptor
336       inheritance may be implemented very easily.
337
338       We can identify several problems with posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp(),
339       but  there does not appear to be a solution that introduces fewer prob‐
340       lems. Environment modification for child process attributes not  speci‐
341       fiable via the attrp or file_actions arguments must be done in the par‐
342       ent process, and since the parent generally wants to save its  context,
343       it  is more costly than similar functionality with fork()/ exec.  It is
344       also complicated to modify the environment of a multi-threaded  process
345       temporarily, since all threads must agree when it is safe for the envi‐
346       ronment to be changed. However, this cost is only borne by those  invo‐
347       cations  of  posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp() that use the additional
348       functionality. Since extensive modifications are not  the  usual  case,
349       and  are  particularly  unlikely in time-critical code, keeping much of
350       the environment control out  of  posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp()  is
351       appropriate design.
352
353       The  posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp()  functions  do not have all the
354       power of fork()/ exec. This is to be expected.  The fork() function  is
355       a  wonderfully  powerful  operation.  We do not expect to duplicate its
356       functionality in a simple,  fast  function  with  no  special  hardware
357       requirements.  It is worth noting that posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp()
358       are very similar to the process creation operations on  many  operating
359       systems that are not UNIX systems.
360
361   Requirements
362       The requirements for posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() are:
363
364        * They must be implementable without an MMU or unusual hardware.
365
366        * They must be compatible with existing POSIX standards.
367
368       Additional goals are:
369
370        * They should be efficiently implementable.
371
372        * They should be able to replace at least 50% of typical executions of
373          fork().
374
375        * A system with posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp()  and  without  fork()
376          should be useful, at least for realtime applications.
377
378        * A system with fork() and the exec family should be able to implement
379          posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() as library routines.
380
381   Two-Syntax
382       POSIX exec has several calling sequences with  approximately  the  same
383       functionality.   These  appear  to  be  required for compatibility with
384       existing practice.  Since the existing practice for the  posix_spawn*()
385       functions  is  otherwise  substantially unlike POSIX, we feel that sim‐
386       plicity outweighs compatibility. There are, therefore, only  two  names
387       for the posix_spawn*() functions.
388
389       The   parameter   list   does  not  differ  between  posix_spawn()  and
390       posix_spawnp(); posix_spawnp() interprets  the  second  parameter  more
391       elaborately than posix_spawn().
392
393   Compatibility with POSIX.5 (Ada)
394       The   Start_Process   and   Start_Process_Search  procedures  from  the
395       POSIX_Process_Primitives package  from  the  Ada  language  binding  to
396       POSIX.1  encapsulate  fork() and exec functionality in a manner similar
397       to that of posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp().   Originally,  in  keeping
398       with our simplicity goal, the standard developers had limited the capa‐
399       bilities of posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() to a subset of  the  capa‐
400       bilities of Start_Process and Start_Process_Search; certain non-default
401       capabilities were not supported. However, based on suggestions  by  the
402       ballot  group to improve file descriptor mapping or drop it, and on the
403       advice of an Ada Language Bindings working group member,  the  standard
404       developers decided that posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() should be suf‐
405       ficiently powerful to implement Start_Process and Start_Process_Search.
406       The  rationale  is that if the Ada language binding to such a primitive
407       had already been approved as an IEEE standard, there can be little jus‐
408       tification  for  not approving the functionally-equivalent parts of a C
409       binding. The only three  capabilities  provided  by  posix_spawn()  and
410       posix_spawnp()   that   are   not   provided   by   Start_Process   and
411       Start_Process_Search are  optionally  specifying  the  child's  process
412       group  ID, the set of signals to be reset to default signal handling in
413       the child process, and the child's scheduling policy and parameters.
414
415       For the Ada language binding for Start_Process to be  implemented  with
416       posix_spawn(), that binding would need to explicitly pass an empty sig‐
417       nal mask and the parent's environment  to  posix_spawn()  whenever  the
418       caller  of  Start_Process  allowed  these  arguments  to default, since
419       posix_spawn()  does  not  provide  such  defaults.   The   ability   of
420       Start_Process  to  mask  user-specified signals during its execution is
421       functionally unique to the Ada language binding and must be dealt  with
422       in the binding separately from the call to posix_spawn().
423
424   Process Group
425       The  process  group  inheritance  field  can  be used to join the child
426       process with an existing process group. By assigning a value of zero to
427       the  spawn-pgroup  attribute  of  the  object  referenced by attrp, the
428       setpgid() mechanism will place the  child  process  in  a  new  process
429       group.
430
431   Threads
432       Without the posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() functions, systems without
433       address translation can still use threads to  give  an  abstraction  of
434       concurrency.  In  many  cases,  thread creation suffices, but it is not
435       always a good substitute. The posix_spawn()  and  posix_spawnp()  func‐
436       tions  are  considerably "heavier" than thread creation. Processes have
437       several important attributes that threads do not. Even without  address
438       translation, a process may have base-and-bound memory protection.  Each
439       process has a process environment  including  security  attributes  and
440       file  capabilities,  and  powerful  scheduling  attributes.   Processes
441       abstract the behavior of non-uniform-memory-architecture  multi-proces‐
442       sors  better  than  threads,  and  they  are more convenient to use for
443       activities that are not closely linked.
444
445       The posix_spawn() and posix_spawnp() functions may  not  bring  support
446       for  multiple processes to every configuration. Process creation is not
447       the only piece of operating system support required to support multiple
448       processes.  The  total  cost  of  support for multiple processes may be
449       quite high in some circumstances.  Existing practice shows that support
450       for  multiple  processes is uncommon and threads are common among "tiny
451       kernels".  There should, therefore, probably continue to  be  AEPs  for
452       operating systems with only one process.
453
454   Asynchronous Error Notification
455       A  library implementation of posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() may not be
456       able to detect all possible errors before it forks the  child  process.
457       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  provides  for an error indication returned from a
458       child process which could not successfully complete the spawn operation
459       via  a special exit status which may be detected using the status value
460       returned by wait() and waitpid().
461
462       The stat_val interface and the macros used to interpret it are not well
463       suited  to  the  purpose of returning API errors, but they are the only
464       path available to a library implementation.   Thus,  an  implementation
465       may  cause the child process to exit with exit status 127 for any error
466       detected  during  the  spawn  process  after   the   posix_spawn()   or
467       posix_spawnp() function has successfully returned.
468
469       The  standard  developers  had  proposed using two additional macros to
470       interpret stat_val. The first, WIFSPAWNFAIL, would have detected a sta‐
471       tus  that  indicated that the child exited because of an error detected
472       during the posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() operations rather than  dur‐
473       ing  actual  execution  of the child process image; the second, WSPAWN‐
474       ERRNO, would have extracted the error value if WIFSPAWNFAIL indicated a
475       failure.  Unfortunately, the ballot group strongly opposed this because
476       it  would  make  a   library   implementation   of   posix_spawn()   or
477       posix_spawnp()  dependent  on  kernel  modifications to waitpid() to be
478       able to embed special information in stat_val to indicate a spawn fail‐
479       ure.
480
481       The  8  bits  of  child  process  exit  status  that  are guaranteed by
482       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 to be accessible to the waiting parent process are
483       insufficient to disambiguate a spawn error from any other kind of error
484       that may be returned by an arbitrary process image. No  other  bits  of
485       the exit status are required to be visible in stat_val, so these macros
486       could not be strictly implemented at the library  level.  Reserving  an
487       exit  status of 127 for such spawn errors is consistent with the use of
488       this value by system() and popen() to signal failures in  these  opera‐
489       tions  that occur after the function has returned but before a shell is
490       able to execute. The exit status of 127 does not uniquely identify this
491       class  of  error,  nor  does it provide any detailed information on the
492       nature  of  the  failure.  Note  that  a   kernel   implementation   of
493       posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() is permitted (and encouraged) to return
494       any possible error as the function value, thus providing more  detailed
495       failure information to the parent process.
496
497       Thus,   no   special  macros  are  available  to  isolate  asynchronous
498       posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() errors. Instead, errors detected by the
499       posix_spawn()  or posix_spawnp() operations in the context of the child
500       process before the new process image executes are reported  by  setting
501       the  child's exit status to 127. The calling process may use the WIFEX‐
502       ITED and WEXITSTATUS macros on the stat_val stored  by  the  wait()  or
503       waitpid()  functions  to detect spawn failures to the extent that other
504       status values with which the child process image may exit  (before  the
505       parent  can  conclusively  determine  that  the child process image has
506       begun execution) are distinct from exit status 127.
507

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

509       None.
510

SEE ALSO

512       alarm(), chmod(), close(),  dup(),  exec(),  exit(),  fcntl(),  fork(),
513       kill(),           open(),          posix_spawn_file_actions_addclose(),
514       posix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2(), posix_spawn_file_actions_addopen(),
515       posix_spawn_file_actions_destroy(),          posix_spawnattr_destroy(),
516       posix_spawnattr_init(),  posix_spawnattr_getsigdefault(),   posix_spaw‐
517       nattr_getflags(),        posix_spawnattr_getpgroup(),       posix_spaw‐
518       nattr_getschedparam(),  posix_spawnattr_getschedpolicy(),   posix_spaw‐
519       nattr_getsigmask(),     posix_spawnattr_setsigdefault(),    posix_spaw‐
520       nattr_setflags(),       posix_spawnattr_setpgroup(),        posix_spaw‐
521       nattr_setschedparam(),   posix_spawnattr_setschedpolicy(),  posix_spaw‐
522       nattr_setsigmask(), sched_setparam(), sched_setscheduler(),  setpgid(),
523       setuid(),  stat(),  times(),  wait(),  the  Base  Definitions volume of
524       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, <spawn.h>
525
527       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in  electronic  form
528       from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
529       -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX),  The  Open  Group  Base
530       Specifications  Issue  6,  Copyright  (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of
531       Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open  Group.  In  the
532       event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
533       The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group  Standard
534       is  the  referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online
535       at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .
536
537
538
539IEEE/The Open Group                  2003                      POSIX_SPAWN(3P)
Impressum