getpgrp - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


SETPGID(2)                 Linux Programmer’s Manual                SETPGID(2)



NAME
       setpgid, getpgid, setpgrp, getpgrp - set/get process group

SYNOPSIS
       #include <unistd.h>

       int setpgid(pid_t pid, pid_t pgid);
       pid_t getpgid(pid_t pid);
       int setpgrp(void);
       pid_t getpgrp(void);

DESCRIPTION
       setpgid  sets the process group ID of the process specified by pid to pgid.  If pid
       is zero, the process ID of the current process is used.  If pgid is zero, the  pro-
       cess ID of the process specified by pid is used.  If setpgid is used to move a pro-
       cess from one process group to another (as is done by  some  shells  when  creating
       pipelines),  both  process  groups must be part of the same session.  In this case,
       the pgid specifies an existing process group to be joined and  the  session  ID  of
       that group must match the session ID of the joining process.

       getpgid  returns  the  process group ID of the process specified by pid.  If pid is
       zero, the process ID of the current process is used.

       The call setpgrp() is equivalent to setpgid(0,0).

       Similarly, getpgrp() is equivalent to getpgid(0).  Each process group is  a  member
       of a session and each process is a member of the session of which its process group
       is a member.

       Process groups are used for distribution of signals, and by terminals to  arbitrate
       requests  for their input: Processes that have the same process group as the termi-
       nal are foreground and may read, while others will block  with  a  signal  if  they
       attempt  to  read.   These calls are thus used by programs such as csh(1) to create
       process groups in implementing job control.   The  TIOCGPGRP  and  TIOCSPGRP  calls
       described in termios(3) are used to get/set the process group of the control termi-
       nal.

       If a session has a controlling terminal, CLOCAL is not set  and  a  hangup  occurs,
       then  the session leader is sent a SIGHUP.  If the session leader exits, the SIGHUP
       signal will be sent to each process in the foreground process group of the control-
       ling terminal.

       If  the  exit  of the process causes a process group to become orphaned, and if any
       member of the newly-orphaned process group is stopped, then a  SIGHUP  signal  fol-
       lowed  by  a SIGCONT signal will be sent to each process in the newly-orphaned pro-
       cess group.


RETURN VALUE
       On success, setpgid and setpgrp return zero.  On error, -1 is returned,  and  errno
       is set appropriately.

       getpgid returns a process group on success.  On error, -1 is returned, and errno is
       set appropriately.

       getpgrp always returns the current process group.

ERRORS
       EINVAL pgid is less than 0 (setpgid, setpgrp).

       EACCES An attempt was made to change the process group ID of one of the children of
              the  calling process and the child had already performed an execve (setpgid,
              setpgrp).

       EPERM  An attempt was made to move a process into a process group  in  a  different
              session,  or  to  change  the process group ID of one of the children of the
              calling process and the child was in a different session, or to  change  the
              process group ID of a session leader (setpgid, setpgrp).

       ESRCH  For  getpgid:  pid  does not match any process.  For setpgid: pid is not the
              current process and not a child of the current process.

CONFORMING TO
       The functions setpgid and getpgrp conform to POSIX.1.  The function setpgrp is from
       BSD 4.2.  The function getpgid conforms to SVr4.

NOTES
       POSIX  took  setpgid  from the BSD function setpgrp.  Also SysV has a function with
       the same name, but it is identical to setsid(2).

       To   get   the   prototypes   under   glibc,   define   both   _XOPEN_SOURCE    and
       _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED,  or use "#define _XOPEN_SOURCE n" for some integer n larger
       than or equal to 500.

SEE ALSO
       getuid(2), setsid(2), tcgetpgrp(3), tcsetpgrp(3), termios(3)



Linux                             2003-01-20                        SETPGID(2)

Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.55 2007/09/05 04:42:51 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache/1.3.41 (Unix) PHP/5.2.5 mod_perl/1.30 mod_gzip/1.3.26.1a
Under GNU General Public License
2008-08-28 11:52 @38.103.63.61 CrawledBy CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!