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PROLOG

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

NAME

       wait, waitpid — wait for a child process to stop or terminate

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/wait.h>

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

DESCRIPTION

       The  wait()  and  waitpid()  functions  shall obtain status information (see Section 2.13,
       Status Information) pertaining to one of the caller's child processes. The wait() function
       obtains  status  information for process termination from any child process. The waitpid()
       function obtains status information for process termination, and optionally  process  stop
       and/or continue, from a specified subset of the child processes.

       The  wait()  function  shall  cause  the  calling  thread  to  become blocked until status
       information generated by child process termination is made available  to  the  thread,  or
       until delivery of a signal whose action is either to execute a signal-catching function or
       to terminate the process, or  an  error  occurs.  If  termination  status  information  is
       available  prior  to  the call to wait(), return shall be immediate. If termination status
       information is available for two or more child processes, the order in which their  status
       is reported is unspecified.

       As  described  in  Section  2.13,  Status  Information, the wait() and waitpid() functions
       consume the status information they obtain.

       The behavior when multiple threads are  blocked  in  wait(),  waitid(),  or  waitpid()  is
       described in Section 2.13, Status Information.

       The  waitpid() function shall be equivalent to wait() if the pid argument is (pid_t)-1 and
       the options argument is 0. Otherwise, its behavior shall be modified by the values of  the
       pid and options arguments.

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

        *  If pid is equal to (pid_t)-1, status is requested  for  any  child  process.  In  this
           respect, waitpid() is then equivalent to wait().

        *  If  pid  is  greater than 0, it specifies the process ID of a single child process for
           which status is requested.

        *  If pid is 0, status is requested for any child process whose process group ID is equal
           to that of the calling process.

        *  If pid is less than (pid_t)-1, status is requested for any child process whose process
           group ID is equal to the absolute value of pid.

       The options argument is constructed from the bitwise-inclusive OR of zero or more  of  the
       following flags, defined in the <sys/wait.h> header:

       WCONTINUED  The  waitpid() function shall report the status of any continued child process
                   specified by pid whose status has not been reported since it continued from  a
                   job control stop.

       WNOHANG     The  waitpid()  function  shall not suspend execution of the calling thread if
                   status is not immediately available for one of the child  processes  specified
                   by pid.

       WUNTRACED   The status of any child processes specified by pid that are stopped, and whose
                   status has not yet been reported since they stopped, shall also be reported to
                   the requesting process.

       If  wait()  or  waitpid() return because the status of a child process is available, these
       functions shall return a value equal to the process ID of the child process. In this case,
       if  the  value of the argument stat_loc is not a null pointer, information shall be stored
       in the location pointed to by stat_loc.  The value stored at the location  pointed  to  by
       stat_loc  shall be 0 if and only if the status returned is from a terminated child process
       that terminated by one of the following means:

        1. The process returned 0 from main().

        2. The process called _exit() or exit() with a status argument of 0.

        3. The process was terminated because the last thread in the process terminated.

       Regardless of its value, this information may be interpreted using the  following  macros,
       which  are  defined  in  <sys/wait.h>  and  evaluate to integral expressions; the stat_val
       argument is the integer value pointed to by stat_loc.

       WIFEXITED(stat_val)
             Evaluates to a non-zero value if status  was  returned  for  a  child  process  that
             terminated normally.

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

       WIFSIGNALED(stat_val)
             Evaluates  to  a  non-zero  value  if  status  was returned for a child process that
             terminated due to the receipt of a signal that was not caught (see <signal.h>).

       WTERMSIG(stat_val)
             If the value of WIFSIGNALED(stat_val) is  non-zero,  this  macro  evaluates  to  the
             number of the signal that caused the termination of the child process.

       WIFSTOPPED(stat_val)
             Evaluates  to  a  non-zero  value if status was returned for a child process that is
             currently stopped.

       WSTOPSIG(stat_val)
             If the value of WIFSTOPPED(stat_val) is non-zero, this macro evaluates to the number
             of the signal that caused the child process to stop.

       WIFCONTINUED(stat_val)
             Evaluates  to  a  non-zero value if status was returned for a child process that has
             continued from a job control stop.

       It is unspecified whether the status value returned by calls to wait()  or  waitpid()  for
       processes  created  by posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() can indicate a WIFSTOPPED(stat_val)
       before subsequent calls to wait() or waitpid() indicate WIFEXITED(stat_val) as the  result
       of an error detected before the new process image starts executing.

       It  is  unspecified  whether the status value returned by calls to wait() or waitpid() for
       processes created by posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() can indicate a  WIFSIGNALED(stat_val)
       if a signal is sent to the parent's process group after posix_spawn() or posix_spawnp() is
       called.

       If the information pointed to by stat_loc was stored by a call to waitpid() that specified
       the  WUNTRACED  flag  and  did  not specify the WCONTINUED flag, exactly one of the macros
       WIFEXITED(*stat_loc), WIFSIGNALED(*stat_loc), and WIFSTOPPED(*stat_loc) shall evaluate  to
       a non-zero value.

       If the information pointed to by stat_loc was stored by a call to waitpid() that specified
       the WUNTRACED and WCONTINUED  flags,  exactly  one  of  the  macros  WIFEXITED(*stat_loc),
       WIFSIGNALED(*stat_loc),  WIFSTOPPED(*stat_loc), and WIFCONTINUED(*stat_loc) shall evaluate
       to a non-zero value.

       If the information pointed to by stat_loc was stored by a call to waitpid() that  did  not
       specify  the  WUNTRACED  or WCONTINUED flags, or by a call to the wait() function, exactly
       one of the macros WIFEXITED(*stat_loc) and WIFSIGNALED(*stat_loc) shall evaluate to a non-
       zero value.

       If  the  information pointed to by stat_loc was stored by a call to waitpid() that did not
       specify the WUNTRACED flag and specified the WCONTINUED flag, exactly one  of  the  macros
       WIFEXITED(*stat_loc),  WIFSIGNALED(*stat_loc),  and WIFCONTINUED(*stat_loc) shall evaluate
       to a non-zero value.

       If _POSIX_REALTIME_SIGNALS is defined, and the implementation queues the  SIGCHLD  signal,
       then  if  wait()  or waitpid() returns because the status of a child process is available,
       any pending SIGCHLD signal associated with the process ID of the child  process  shall  be
       discarded. Any other pending SIGCHLD signals shall remain pending.

       Otherwise,  if  SIGCHLD  is blocked, if wait() or waitpid() return because the status of a
       child process is available, any pending SIGCHLD signal shall be cleared unless the  status
       of another child process is available.

       For  all other conditions, it is unspecified whether child status will be available when a
       SIGCHLD signal is delivered.

       There may  be  additional  implementation-defined  circumstances  under  which  wait()  or
       waitpid()  report  status.   This shall not occur unless the calling process or one of its
       child processes explicitly makes use of a  non-standard  extension.  In  these  cases  the
       interpretation of the reported status is implementation-defined.

       If  a  parent  process  terminates  without  waiting  for  all  of  its child processes to
       terminate, the remaining child processes  shall  be  assigned  a  new  parent  process  ID
       corresponding to an implementation-defined system process.

RETURN VALUE

       If  wait()  or waitpid() returns because the status of a child process is available, these
       functions shall return a value equal to the process ID of  the  child  process  for  which
       status  is reported. If wait() or waitpid() returns due to the delivery of a signal to the
       calling process, -1 shall be returned and errno set to [EINTR].  If waitpid() was  invoked
       with  WNOHANG set in options, it has at least one child process specified by pid for which
       status is not available, and status is not available for any process specified by  pid,  0
       is returned. Otherwise, -1 shall be returned, and errno set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

       The wait() function shall fail if:

       ECHILD The calling process has no existing unwaited-for child processes.

       EINTR  The  function  was interrupted by a signal. The value of the location pointed to by
              stat_loc is undefined.

       The waitpid() function shall fail if:

       ECHILD The process specified by pid does not exist or  is  not  a  child  of  the  calling
              process,  or the process group specified by pid does not exist or does not have any
              member process that is a child of the calling process.

       EINTR  The function was interrupted by a signal. The value of the location pointed  to  by
              stat_loc is undefined.

       EINVAL The options argument is not valid.

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES

   Waiting for a Child Process and then Checking its Status
       The  following  example  demonstrates the use of waitpid(), fork(), and the macros used to
       interpret the status value returned by waitpid() (and wait()).  The code segment creates a
       child  process  which  does  some  unspecified work. Meanwhile the parent loops performing
       calls to waitpid() to monitor the status of the child.  The  loop  terminates  when  child
       termination is detected.

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

           pid_t child_pid, wpid;
           int status;

           child_pid = fork();
           if (child_pid == -1) {      /* fork() failed */
               perror("fork");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           if (child_pid == 0) {       /* This is the child */
               /* Child does some work and then terminates */
               ...

           } else {                    /* This is the parent */
               do {
                   wpid = waitpid(child_pid, &status, WUNTRACED
           #ifdef WCONTINUED       /* Not all implementations support this */
                   | WCONTINUED
           #endif
                   );
                   if (wpid == -1) {
                       perror("waitpid");
                       exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
                   }

                   if (WIFEXITED(status)) {
                       printf("child exited, status=%d\n", WEXITSTATUS(status));

                   } else if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) {
                       printf("child killed (signal %d)\n", WTERMSIG(status));

                   } else if (WIFSTOPPED(status)) {
                       printf("child stopped (signal %d)\n", WSTOPSIG(status));

           #ifdef WIFCONTINUED     /* Not all implementations support this */
                   } else if (WIFCONTINUED(status)) {
                       printf("child continued\n");
           #endif
                   } else {    /* Non-standard case -- may never happen */
                       printf("Unexpected status (0x%x)\n", status);
                   }
               } while (!WIFEXITED(status) && !WIFSIGNALED(status));
           }

   Waiting for a Child Process in a Signal Handler for SIGCHLD
       The  following  example  demonstrates how to use waitpid() in a signal handler for SIGCHLD
       without passing -1 as the pid argument. (See the APPLICATION USAGE section below  for  the
       reasons  why  passing  a pid of -1 is not recommended.) The method used here relies on the
       standard behavior of waitpid() when  SIGCHLD  is  blocked.  On  historical  non-conforming
       systems, the status of some child processes might not be reported.

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

           #define CHILDREN 10

           static void
           handle_sigchld(int signum, siginfo_t *sinfo, void *unused)
           {
               int sav_errno = errno;
               int status;

               /*
                * Obtain status information for the child which
                * caused the SIGCHLD signal and write its exit code
                * to stdout.
               */
               if (sinfo->si_code != CLD_EXITED)
               {
                   static char msg[] = "wrong si_code\n";
                   write(2, msg, sizeof msg - 1);
               }
               else if (waitpid(sinfo->si_pid, &status, 0) == -1)
               {
                   static char msg[] = "waitpid() failed\n";
                   write(2, msg, sizeof msg - 1);
               }
               else if (!WIFEXITED(status))
               {
                   static char msg[] = "WIFEXITED was false\n";
                   write(2, msg, sizeof msg - 1);
               }
               else
               {
                   int code = WEXITSTATUS(status);
                   char buf[2];
                   buf[0] = '0' + code;
                   buf[1] = '\n';
                   write(1, buf, 2);
               }
               errno = sav_errno;
           }

           int
           main(void)
           {
               int i;
               pid_t pid;
               struct sigaction sa;

               sa.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO;
               sa.sa_sigaction = handle_sigchld;
               sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask);
               if (sigaction(SIGCHLD, &sa, NULL) == -1)
               {
                   perror("sigaction");
                   exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
               }

               for (i = 0; i < CHILDREN; i++)
               {
                   switch (pid = fork())
                   {
                   case -1:
                       perror("fork");
                       exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
                   case 0:
                       sleep(2);
                       _exit(i);
                   }
               }

               /* Wait for all the SIGCHLD signals, then terminate on SIGALRM */
               alarm(3);
               for (;;)
                   pause();

               return 0; /* NOTREACHED */
           }

APPLICATION USAGE

       Calls  to  wait()  will  collect  information  about any child process. This may result in
       interactions with other interfaces that may be waiting for their own children (such as  by
       use of system()).  For this and other reasons it is recommended that portable applications
       not use wait(), but instead use waitpid().  For these same reasons, the use  of  waitpid()
       with  a pid argument of -1, and the use of waitid() with the idtype argument set to P_ALL,
       are also not recommended for portable applications.

       As  specified  in  Consequences  of  Process  Termination,  if  the  calling  process  has
       SA_NOCLDWAIT  set  or  has SIGCHLD set to SIG_IGN, then the termination of a child process
       will not cause status information to become available  to  a  thread  blocked  in  wait(),
       waitid(),  or  waitpid().  Thus, a thread blocked in one of the wait functions will remain
       blocked unless some other condition causes the thread to  resume  execution  (such  as  an
       [ECHILD] failure due to no remaining children in the set of waited-for children).

RATIONALE

       A  call  to  the  wait()  or  waitpid() function only returns status on an immediate child
       process of the calling process; that is, a child that was produced by a single fork() call
       (perhaps followed by an exec or other function calls) from the parent. If a child produces
       grandchildren by further use of fork(), none of  those  grandchildren  nor  any  of  their
       descendants  affect  the behavior of a wait() from the original parent process. Nothing in
       this volume of POSIX.1‐2017 prevents an  implementation  from  providing  extensions  that
       permit  a process to get status from a grandchild or any other process, but a process that
       does not use such extensions must be  guaranteed  to  see  status  from  only  its  direct
       children.

       The waitpid() function is provided for three reasons:

        1. To support job control

        2. To permit a non-blocking version of the wait() function

        3. To  permit  a  library routine, such as system() or pclose(), to wait for its children
           without interfering with other terminated children  for  which  the  process  has  not
           waited

       The  first  two of these facilities are based on the wait3() function provided by 4.3 BSD.
       The function uses the options argument, which is equivalent to  an  argument  to  wait3().
       The  WUNTRACED flag is used only in conjunction with job control on systems supporting job
       control. Its name comes from 4.3 BSD and refers to the fact that there are  two  types  of
       stopped  processes  in  that  implementation:  processes  being  traced  via  the ptrace()
       debugging facility and (untraced) processes stopped by job control signals. Since ptrace()
       is  not  part  of  this volume of POSIX.1‐2017, only the second type is relevant. The name
       WUNTRACED was retained because its usage  is  the  same,  even  though  the  name  is  not
       intuitively meaningful in this context.

       The third reason for the waitpid() function is to permit independent sections of a process
       to spawn and wait for children without interfering  with  each  other.  For  example,  the
       following problem occurs in developing a portable shell, or command interpreter:

           stream = popen("/bin/true");
           (void) system("sleep 100");
           (void) pclose(stream);

       On  all  historical implementations, the final pclose() fails to reap the wait() status of
       the popen().

       The status values are retrieved by macros, rather than given as specific bit encodings  as
       they are in most historical implementations (and thus expected by existing programs). This
       was necessary to eliminate a limitation on the number of  signals  an  implementation  can
       support  that  was inherent in the traditional encodings. This volume of POSIX.1‐2017 does
       require that a status value of zero corresponds to a process calling _exit(0), as this  is
       the  most  common  encoding  expected  by existing programs.  Some of the macro names were
       adopted from 4.3 BSD.

       These macros syntactically  operate  on  an  arbitrary  integer  value.  The  behavior  is
       undefined  unless  that value is one stored by a successful call to wait() or waitpid() in
       the location pointed to by the stat_loc argument. An early proposal attempted to make this
       clearer  by specifying each argument as *stat_loc rather than stat_val.  However, that did
       not follow the conventions of other specifications  in  this  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2017  or
       traditional  usage.  It  also  could  have  implied  that  the  argument to the macro must
       literally be *stat_loc; in fact, that value can be stored or  passed  as  an  argument  to
       other functions before being interpreted by these macros.

       The   extension   that   affects   wait()  and  waitpid()  and  is  common  in  historical
       implementations is the ptrace() function. It is called by a child process and causes  that
       child  to  stop  and  return  a  status  that appears identical to the status indicated by
       WIFSTOPPED.  The status of ptrace() children is traditionally returned regardless  of  the
       WUNTRACED  flag  (or  by  the  wait()  function). Most applications do not need to concern
       themselves with such extensions because they have control over  what  extensions  they  or
       their  children  use.  However,  applications,  such  as command interpreters, that invoke
       arbitrary processes may see this behavior  when  those  arbitrary  processes  misuse  such
       extensions.

       Implementations that support core file creation or other implementation-defined actions on
       termination of some processes traditionally provide a bit in the status returned by wait()
       to indicate that such actions have occurred.

       Allowing  the  wait()  family  of  functions  to  discard a pending SIGCHLD signal that is
       associated with a successfully waited-for child process puts them into the  sigwait()  and
       sigwaitinfo() category with respect to SIGCHLD.

       This  definition  allows  implementations to treat a pending SIGCHLD signal as accepted by
       the process in wait(), with the same meaning of ``accepted'' as when that word is  applied
       to the sigwait() family of functions.

       Allowing the wait() family of functions to behave this way permits an implementation to be
       able to deal precisely with SIGCHLD signals.

       In particular, an implementation that does accept (discard) the SIGCHLD  signal  can  make
       the  following  guarantees regardless of the queuing depth of signals in general (the list
       of waitable children can hold the SIGCHLD queue):

        1. If a SIGCHLD signal handler is established via sigaction()  without  the  SA_RESETHAND
           flag,  SIGCHLD  signals can be accurately counted; that is, exactly one SIGCHLD signal
           will be delivered to  or  accepted  by  the  process  for  every  child  process  that
           terminates.

        2. A  single  wait()  issued  from  a  SIGCHLD signal handler can be guaranteed to return
           immediately with status information for a child process.

        3. When SA_SIGINFO is requested, the SIGCHLD signal handler can be guaranteed to  receive
           a non-null pointer to a siginfo_t structure that describes a child process for which a
           wait via waitpid() or waitid() will not block or fail.

        4. The system() function will not cause the SIGCHLD handler of a process to be called  as
           a  result of the fork()/exec executed within system() because system() will accept the
           SIGCHLD signal when it performs a waitpid() for its child process. This is a desirable
           behavior  of system() so that it can be used in a library without causing side-effects
           to the application linked with the library.

       An implementation that does not permit the wait() family of functions to accept  (discard)
       a  pending SIGCHLD signal associated with a successfully waited-for child, cannot make the
       guarantees described above for the following reasons:

       Guarantee #1
             Although it might be assumed that reliable queuing of all SIGCHLD signals  generated
             by  the system can make this guarantee, the counter-example is the case of a process
             that blocks SIGCHLD and performs an indefinite loop of fork()/wait() operations.  If
             the  implementation supports queued signals, then eventually the system will run out
             of memory for the queue. The guarantee cannot be made because  there  must  be  some
             limit to the depth of queuing.

       Guarantees #2 and #3
             These cannot be guaranteed unless the wait() family of functions accepts the SIGCHLD
             signal. Otherwise, a fork()/wait() executed while SIGCHLD  is  blocked  (as  in  the
             system()  function)  will  result  in  an  invocation of the handler when SIGCHLD is
             unblocked, after the process has disappeared.

       Guarantee #4
             Although possible to make this guarantee, system() would have  to  set  the  SIGCHLD
             handler  to  SIG_DFL  so  that  the  SIGCHLD signal generated by its fork() would be
             discarded (the SIGCHLD default action is to be ignored),  then  restore  it  to  its
             previous  setting.  This  would  have  the undesirable side-effect of discarding all
             SIGCHLD signals pending to the process.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       Section 2.13, Status Information, exec, exit(), fork(), system(), waitid()

       The Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2017,  Section  4.12,  Memory  Synchronization,
       <signal.h>, <sys_wait.h>

COPYRIGHT

       Portions  of  this  text  are  reprinted  and  reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std
       1003.1-2017, Standard for Information Technology -- Portable  Operating  System  Interface
       (POSIX),  The  Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, 2018 Edition, Copyright (C) 2018 by
       the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The  Open  Group.   In  the
       event  of  any  discrepancy  between this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group  Standard  is  the  referee  document.  The
       original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

       Any  typographical  or  formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have
       been introduced during the conversion of the source files to man page  format.  To  report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .