waitpid()--Wait for Specific Child Process


  Syntax
 #include <sys/types.h>
 #include <sys/wait.h>

 pid_t waitpid(pid_t pid, int *stat_loc, int options);   

  Service Program Name: QP0ZSPWN

  Default Public Authority: *USE

  Threadsafe: Yes

The waitpid() function allows the calling thread to obtain status information for one of its child processes. The calling thread suspends processing until status information is available for the specified child process, if the options argument is 0. A suspended waitpid() function call can be interrupted by the delivery of a signal whose action is either to run a signal-catching function or to terminate the process. When waitpid() is successful, status information about how the child process ended (for example, whether the process ended normally) is stored in the location specified by stat_loc.

The waitpid() function behaves the same as wait() if the pid argument is (pid_t)-1 and the options argument is 0.


Parameters

pid
(Input) A process ID or a process group ID to identify the child process or processes on which waitpid() should operate.

stat_loc
(Input) Pointer to an area where status information about how the child process ended is to be placed.

options
(Input) An integer field containing flags that define how waitpid() should operate.

The pid argument specifies a set of child processes for which status is requested. The waitpid() function only returns the status of a child process from the following set:

The status referenced by the stat_loc argument is interpreted using macros defined in the <sys/wait.h> header file. The macros use an argument stat_val, which is the integer value pointed to by stat_loc. When waitpid() returns with a valid process ID (pid), the macros analyze the status referenced by the stat_loc argument. The macros are as follows:

WIFEXITED(stat_val) Evaluates to a nonzero value if the status was returned for a child process that ended normally.

WEXITSTATUS(stat_val) If the value of the WIFEXITED(stat_val) is nonzero, evaluates to the low-order 8 bits of the status argument that the child process passed to exit(), or to the value the child process returned from main().

WIFSIGNALED(stat_val) Evaluates to a nonzero value if the status was returned for a child process that ended because of the receipt of a terminating signal that was not caught by the process.

WTERMSIG(stat_val) If the value of WIFSIGNALED(stat_val) is nonzero, evaluates to the number of the signal that caused the child process to end.

WIFStopPED(stat_val) Evaluates to a nonzero value if the status was returned for a child process that is currently stopped.

WStopSIG(stat_val) If the value of the WIFStopPED(stat_val) is nonzero, evaluates to the number of the signal that caused the child process to stop.

WIFEXCEPTION(stat_val) Evaluates to a nonzero value if the status was returned for a child process that ended because of an error condition.

Note: The WIFEXCEPTION macro is unique to the i5/OS implementation. See the Usage Notes.

WEXCEPTNUMBER(stat_val) If the value of the WIFEXCEPTION(stat_val) is nonzero, this macro evaluates to the last i5/OS exception number related to the child process.

Note: The WEXCEPTNUMBER macro is unique to the i5/OS implementation. See the Usage Notes.

The options argument can be set to either 0 or WNOHANG. WNOHANG indicates that the waitpid() function should not suspend processing of the calling thread if status is not immediately available for one of the child processes specified by pid. If WNOHANG is specified and no child process is immediately available, waitpid() returns 0.


Authorities

None


Return Value

value waitpid() was successful. The value returned indicates the process ID of the child process whose status information was recorded in the storage pointed to by stat_loc.
0 WNOHANG was specified on the options parameter, but no child process was immediately available.
-1 waitpid() was not successful. The errno value is set to indicate the error.


Error Conditions

If waitpid() is not successful, errno usually indicates one of the following errors. Under some conditions, errno could indicate an error other than those listed here.

[ECHILD]

Calling process has no remaining child processes on which wait operation can be performed.

[EINVAL]

The value specified for the argument is not correct.

A function was passed incorrect argument values, or an operation was attempted on an object and the operation specified is not supported for that type of object.

An argument value is not valid, out of range, or NULL.

[EFAULT]

The address used for an argument is not correct.

In attempting to use an argument in a call, the system detected an address that is not valid.

While attempting to access a parameter passed to this function, the system detected an address that is not valid.

[EINTR]

Interrupted function call.

[EOPNOTSUPP]

Operation not supported.

The operation, though supported in general, is not supported for the requested object or the requested arguments.

[EUNKNOWN]

Unknown system state.

The operation failed because of an unknown system state. See any messages in the job log and correct any errors that are indicated, then retry the operation.


Usage Notes

  1. The WIFEXCEPTION macro is unique to the i5/OS implementation. This macro can be used to determine whether the child process has ended because of an exception. When WIFEXCEPTION returns a nonzero value, the value returned by the WEXCEPTNUMBER macro corresponds to the last i5/OS exception number related to the child process.

  2. When a child process ends because of an exception, the ILE C run-time library catches and handles the original exception. The value returned by WEXCEPTNUMBER indicates that the exception was CEE9901. This is a common exception ID. If you want to determine the original exception that ended the child process, look at the job log for the child process.

  3. If the child process is ended by any of the following:

    then the parent's wait() stat_loc value indicates that:


Related Information


Example

See Code disclaimer information for information pertaining to code examples.

For an example of using this function, see Using the Spawn Process and Wait for Child Process APIs in API examples.



API introduced: V3R6
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