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NAME

       clone, __clone2 - create a child process

SYNOPSIS

       /* Prototype for the glibc wrapper function */

       #include <sched.h>

       int clone(int (*fn)(void *), void *child_stack,
                 int flags, void *arg, ...
                 /* pid_t *ptid, struct user_desc *tls, pid_t *ctid */ );

       /* Prototype for the raw system call */

       long clone(unsigned long flags, void *child_stack,
                 void *ptid, void *ctid,
                 struct pt_regs *regs);

   Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc wrapper function (see feature_test_macros(7)):

       clone():
           Since glibc 2.14:
               _GNU_SOURCE
           Before glibc 2.14:
               _BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE
                   /* _GNU_SOURCE also suffices */

DESCRIPTION

       clone() creates a new process, in a manner similar to fork(2).

       This page describes both the glibc clone() wrapper function and the underlying system call on which it is
       based.   The  main  text  describes  the  wrapper  function;  the differences for the raw system call are
       described toward the end of this page.

       Unlike fork(2), clone() allows the child process to share parts of its execution context with the calling
       process, such as the memory space, the table of file descriptors,  and  the  table  of  signal  handlers.
       (Note  that on this manual page, "calling process" normally corresponds to "parent process".  But see the
       description of CLONE_PARENT below.)

       The main use of clone() is to implement threads: multiple threads  of  control  in  a  program  that  run
       concurrently in a shared memory space.

       When  the  child  process  is created with clone(), it executes the function fn(arg).  (This differs from
       fork(2), where execution continues in the child from the point of the fork(2) call.)  The fn argument  is
       a  pointer  to a function that is called by the child process at the beginning of its execution.  The arg
       argument is passed to the fn function.

       When the fn(arg) function application returns, the child process terminates.  The integer returned by  fn
       is  the  exit  code  for  the  child process.  The child process may also terminate explicitly by calling
       exit(2) or after receiving a fatal signal.

       The child_stack argument specifies the location of the stack used by the child process.  Since the  child
       and  calling  process  may  share memory, it is not possible for the child process to execute in the same
       stack as the calling process.  The calling process must therefore set up memory space for the child stack
       and pass a pointer to this space to clone().  Stacks grow downward  on  all  processors  that  run  Linux
       (except  the  HP PA processors), so child_stack usually points to the topmost address of the memory space
       set up for the child stack.

       The low byte of flags contains the number of the termination signal sent to the  parent  when  the  child
       dies.   If  this signal is specified as anything other than SIGCHLD, then the parent process must specify
       the __WALL or __WCLONE options when waiting for the child with wait(2).  If no signal is specified,  then
       the parent process is not signaled when the child terminates.

       flags may also be bitwise-or'ed with zero or more of the following constants, in order to specify what is
       shared between the calling process and the child process:

       CLONE_CHILD_CLEARTID (since Linux 2.5.49)
              Erase  child  thread  ID at location ctid in child memory when the child exits, and do a wakeup on
              the futex at that address.  The address involved may be changed by the  set_tid_address(2)  system
              call.  This is used by threading libraries.

       CLONE_CHILD_SETTID (since Linux 2.5.49)
              Store child thread ID at location ctid in child memory.

       CLONE_FILES (since Linux 2.0)
              If  CLONE_FILES  is  set, the calling process and the child process share the same file descriptor
              table.  Any file descriptor created by the calling process or by the child process is  also  valid
              in the other process.  Similarly, if one of the processes closes a file descriptor, or changes its
              associated flags (using the fcntl(2) F_SETFD operation), the other process is also affected.

              If CLONE_FILES is not set, the child process inherits a copy of all file descriptors opened in the
              calling  process  at  the time of clone().  (The duplicated file descriptors in the child refer to
              the same open file descriptions (see open(2)) as the corresponding file descriptors in the calling
              process.)  Subsequent operations that open or close file descriptors, or  change  file  descriptor
              flags,  performed  by  either  the  calling  process  or the child process do not affect the other
              process.

       CLONE_FS (since Linux 2.0)
              If CLONE_FS is set, the caller and the child process share the same filesystem information.   This
              includes  the  root  of the filesystem, the current working directory, and the umask.  Any call to
              chroot(2), chdir(2), or umask(2) performed by the  calling  process  or  the  child  process  also
              affects the other process.

              If  CLONE_FS  is  not  set, the child process works on a copy of the filesystem information of the
              calling process at the time of the clone() call.  Calls to chroot(2), chdir(2), umask(2) performed
              later by one of the processes do not affect the other process.

       CLONE_IO (since Linux 2.6.25)
              If CLONE_IO is set, then the new process shares an I/O context with the calling process.  If  this
              flag is not set, then (as with fork(2)) the new process has its own I/O context.

              The  I/O context is the I/O scope of the disk scheduler (i.e, what the I/O scheduler uses to model
              scheduling of a process's I/O).  If processes share the same I/O context, they are treated as  one
              by the I/O scheduler.  As a consequence, they get to share disk time.  For some I/O schedulers, if
              two  processes  share  an  I/O  context, they will be allowed to interleave their disk access.  If
              several threads are doing I/O on behalf of the same  process  (aio_read(3),  for  instance),  they
              should employ CLONE_IO to get better I/O performance.

              If the kernel is not configured with the CONFIG_BLOCK option, this flag is a no-op.

       CLONE_NEWIPC (since Linux 2.6.19)
              If  CLONE_NEWIPC is set, then create the process in a new IPC namespace.  If this flag is not set,
              then (as with fork(2)), the process is created in the same IPC namespace as the  calling  process.
              This flag is intended for the implementation of containers.

              An IPC namespace provides an isolated view of System V IPC objects (see svipc(7)) and (since Linux
              2.6.30)  POSIX  message  queues  (see  mq_overview(7)).   The  common  characteristic of these IPC
              mechanisms is that IPC objects are identified by mechanisms other than filesystem pathnames.

              Objects created in an IPC namespace are visible to all other processes that are  members  of  that
              namespace, but are not visible to processes in other IPC namespaces.

              When  an IPC namespace is destroyed (i.e., when the last process that is a member of the namespace
              terminates), all IPC objects in the namespace are automatically destroyed.

              Use of this flag requires: a kernel configured with the CONFIG_SYSVIPC and  CONFIG_IPC_NS  options
              and  that  the process be privileged (CAP_SYS_ADMIN).  This flag can't be specified in conjunction
              with CLONE_SYSVSEM.

       CLONE_NEWNET (since Linux 2.6.24)
              (The implementation of this flag was completed only by about kernel version 2.6.29.)

              If CLONE_NEWNET is set, then create the process in a new network namespace.  If this flag  is  not
              set,  then  (as with fork(2)), the process is created in the same network namespace as the calling
              process.  This flag is intended for the implementation of containers.

              A network namespace provides an isolated view of the networking stack (network device  interfaces,
              IPv4 and IPv6 protocol stacks, IP routing tables, firewall rules, the /proc/net and /sys/class/net
              directory  trees,  sockets,  etc.).   A  physical  network  device can live in exactly one network
              namespace.  A virtual network device ("veth") pair provides a pipe-like abstraction  that  can  be
              used  to  create  tunnels  between  network  namespaces,  and  can be used to create a bridge to a
              physical network device in another namespace.

              When a network namespace is freed (i.e., when the last process in the namespace  terminates),  its
              physical network devices are moved back to the initial network namespace (not to the parent of the
              process).

              Use  of this flag requires: a kernel configured with the CONFIG_NET_NS option and that the process
              be privileged (CAP_SYS_ADMIN).

       CLONE_NEWNS (since Linux 2.4.19)
              Start the child in a new mount namespace.

              Every process lives in a mount namespace.  The namespace of a process is  the  data  (the  set  of
              mounts)  describing  the file hierarchy as seen by that process.  After a fork(2) or clone() where
              the CLONE_NEWNS flag is not set, the child lives in the same mount namespace as the  parent.   The
              system  calls  mount(2) and umount(2) change the mount namespace of the calling process, and hence
              affect all processes that live in the same namespace, but do not affect processes in  a  different
              mount namespace.

              After  a  clone()  where  the  CLONE_NEWNS flag is set, the cloned child is started in a new mount
              namespace, initialized with a copy of the namespace of the parent.

              Only a privileged process (one having the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability) may  specify  the  CLONE_NEWNS
              flag.  It is not permitted to specify both CLONE_NEWNS and CLONE_FS in the same clone() call.

       CLONE_NEWPID (since Linux 2.6.24)
              If  CLONE_NEWPID is set, then create the process in a new PID namespace.  If this flag is not set,
              then (as with fork(2)), the process is created in the same PID namespace as the  calling  process.
              This flag is intended for the implementation of containers.

              A  PID  namespace  provides  an isolated environment for PIDs: PIDs in a new namespace start at 1,
              somewhat like a standalone system, and  calls  to  fork(2),  vfork(2),  or  clone()  will  produce
              processes with PIDs that are unique within the namespace.

              The  first  process  created  in a new namespace (i.e., the process created using the CLONE_NEWPID
              flag) has the PID 1, and is the "init" process for the  namespace.   Children  that  are  orphaned
              within  the  namespace  will  be  reparented  to  this  process  rather  than init(8).  Unlike the
              traditional init process, the "init" process of a PID namespace can terminate, and if it does, all
              of the processes in the namespace are terminated.

              PID namespaces form a hierarchy.  When a new PID namespace  is  created,  the  processes  in  that
              namespace  are  visible  in  the  PID  namespace  of  the  process that created the new namespace;
              analogously, if the parent PID namespace is itself  the  child  of  another  PID  namespace,  then
              processes  in  the  child  and  parent  PID namespaces will both be visible in the grandparent PID
              namespace.  Conversely, the processes in the "child" PID namespace do not see the processes in the
              parent namespace.  The existence of a namespace hierarchy means that each  process  may  now  have
              multiple  PIDs: one for each namespace in which it is visible; each of these PIDs is unique within
              the corresponding namespace.  (A call to getpid(2) always returns  the  PID  associated  with  the
              namespace in which the process lives.)

              After  creating  the  new  namespace,  it is useful for the child to change its root directory and
              mount a new procfs instance at /proc so that tools such as ps(1) work correctly.  (If  CLONE_NEWNS
              is  also  included  in  flags,  then it isn't necessary to change the root directory: a new procfs
              instance can be mounted directly over /proc.)

              Use of this flag requires: a kernel configured with the CONFIG_PID_NS option and that the  process
              be privileged (CAP_SYS_ADMIN).  This flag can't be specified in conjunction with CLONE_THREAD.

       CLONE_NEWUTS (since Linux 2.6.19)
              If  CLONE_NEWUTS  is  set,  then  create the process in a new UTS namespace, whose identifiers are
              initialized by duplicating the identifiers from the UTS namespace of the calling process.  If this
              flag is not set, then (as with fork(2)), the process is created in the same UTS namespace  as  the
              calling process.  This flag is intended for the implementation of containers.

              A  UTS  namespace is the set of identifiers returned by uname(2); among these, the domain name and
              the host name can be modified by setdomainname(2) and sethostname(2), respectively.  Changes  made
              to  the  identifiers  in a UTS namespace are visible to all other processes in the same namespace,
              but are not visible to processes in other UTS namespaces.

              Use of this flag requires: a kernel configured with the CONFIG_UTS_NS option and that the  process
              be privileged (CAP_SYS_ADMIN).

       CLONE_PARENT (since Linux 2.3.12)
              If  CLONE_PARENT  is set, then the parent of the new child (as returned by getppid(2)) will be the
              same as that of the calling process.

              If CLONE_PARENT is not set, then (as with fork(2)) the child's parent is the calling process.

              Note that it is the parent process, as returned by getppid(2), which is signaled  when  the  child
              terminates,  so  that  if CLONE_PARENT is set, then the parent of the calling process, rather than
              the calling process itself, will be signaled.

       CLONE_PARENT_SETTID (since Linux 2.5.49)
              Store child thread ID at location ptid in parent and child memory.  (In Linux 2.5.32-2.5.48  there
              was a flag CLONE_SETTID that did this.)

       CLONE_PID (obsolete)
              If CLONE_PID is set, the child process is created with the same process ID as the calling process.
              This is good for hacking the system, but otherwise of not much use.  Since 2.3.21 this flag can be
              specified only by the system boot process (PID 0).  It disappeared in Linux 2.5.16.

       CLONE_PTRACE (since Linux 2.2)
              If  CLONE_PTRACE  is specified, and the calling process is being traced, then trace the child also
              (see ptrace(2)).

       CLONE_SETTLS (since Linux 2.5.32)
              The newtls argument is the new TLS (Thread Local Storage) descriptor.  (See set_thread_area(2).)

       CLONE_SIGHAND (since Linux 2.0)
              If CLONE_SIGHAND is set, the calling process and the child process share the same table of  signal
              handlers.   If  the  calling  process  or  child process calls sigaction(2) to change the behavior
              associated with a signal, the behavior is changed in the other  process  as  well.   However,  the
              calling  process and child processes still have distinct signal masks and sets of pending signals.
              So, one of them may block or unblock some signals using sigprocmask(2) without affecting the other
              process.

              If CLONE_SIGHAND is not set, the child process inherits a copy  of  the  signal  handlers  of  the
              calling  process  at  the time clone() is called.  Calls to sigaction(2) performed later by one of
              the processes have no effect on the other process.

              Since Linux 2.6.0-test6, flags must also include CLONE_VM if CLONE_SIGHAND is specified

       CLONE_STOPPED (since Linux 2.6.0-test2)
              If CLONE_STOPPED is set, then the child is initially stopped (as though  it  was  sent  a  SIGSTOP
              signal), and must be resumed by sending it a SIGCONT signal.

              This flag was deprecated from Linux 2.6.25 onward, and was removed altogether in Linux 2.6.38.

       CLONE_SYSVSEM (since Linux 2.5.10)
              If  CLONE_SYSVSEM  is  set, then the child and the calling process share a single list of System V
              semaphore undo values (see semop(2)).  If this flag is not set, then the child has a separate undo
              list, which is initially empty.

       CLONE_THREAD (since Linux 2.4.0-test8)
              If CLONE_THREAD is set, the child is placed in the same thread group as the calling  process.   To
              make  the  remainder of the discussion of CLONE_THREAD more readable, the term "thread" is used to
              refer to the processes within a thread group.

              Thread groups were a feature added in Linux 2.4 to support the POSIX threads notion of  a  set  of
              threads  that  share  a  single  PID.   Internally,  this shared PID is the so-called thread group
              identifier (TGID) for the thread group.  Since Linux 2.4, calls to getpid(2) return  the  TGID  of
              the caller.

              The threads within a group can be distinguished by their (system-wide) unique thread IDs (TID).  A
              new  thread's  TID  is  available  as the function result returned to the caller of clone(), and a
              thread can obtain its own TID using gettid(2).

              When a call is made to clone() without specifying  CLONE_THREAD,  then  the  resulting  thread  is
              placed  in  a  new  thread  group  whose TGID is the same as the thread's TID.  This thread is the
              leader of the new thread group.

              A new thread created with CLONE_THREAD has the same parent process as the caller of clone() (i.e.,
              like CLONE_PARENT), so that calls to getppid(2) return the same value for all of the threads in  a
              thread  group.  When a CLONE_THREAD thread terminates, the thread that created it using clone() is
              not sent a SIGCHLD (or other termination) signal; nor can the status of such a thread be  obtained
              using wait(2).  (The thread is said to be detached.)

              After  all  of  the  threads in a thread group terminate the parent process of the thread group is
              sent a SIGCHLD (or other termination) signal.

              If any of the threads in a thread group performs an execve(2), then all  threads  other  than  the
              thread group leader are terminated, and the new program is executed in the thread group leader.

              If  one  of  the  threads  in a thread group creates a child using fork(2), then any thread in the
              group can wait(2) for that child.

              Since Linux 2.5.35, flags must also include CLONE_SIGHAND if CLONE_THREAD is specified.

              Signals may be sent to a thread group as a whole (i.e., a TGID) using kill(2), or  to  a  specific
              thread (i.e., TID) using tgkill(2).

              Signal dispositions and actions are process-wide: if an unhandled signal is delivered to a thread,
              then it will affect (terminate, stop, continue, be ignored in) all members of the thread group.

              Each  thread has its own signal mask, as set by sigprocmask(2), but signals can be pending either:
              for the whole process (i.e., deliverable to any member  of  the  thread  group),  when  sent  with
              kill(2); or for an individual thread, when sent with tgkill(2).  A call to sigpending(2) returns a
              signal set that is the union of the signals pending for the whole process and the signals that are
              pending for the calling thread.

              If  kill(2)  is  used  to  send  a  signal to a thread group, and the thread group has installed a
              handler for the signal, then the handler will be invoked  in  exactly  one,  arbitrarily  selected
              member  of  the  thread group that has not blocked the signal.  If multiple threads in a group are
              waiting to accept the same signal using sigwaitinfo(2), the kernel will arbitrarily select one  of
              these threads to receive a signal sent using kill(2).

       CLONE_UNTRACED (since Linux 2.5.46)
              If  CLONE_UNTRACED  is  specified,  then a tracing process cannot force CLONE_PTRACE on this child
              process.

       CLONE_VFORK (since Linux 2.2)
              If CLONE_VFORK is set, the execution of the calling process is suspended until the child  releases
              its virtual memory resources via a call to execve(2) or _exit(2) (as with vfork(2)).

              If  CLONE_VFORK  is  not set then both the calling process and the child are schedulable after the
              call, and an application should not rely on execution occurring in any particular order.

       CLONE_VM (since Linux 2.0)
              If CLONE_VM is set, the calling process and the child process run in the same  memory  space.   In
              particular,  memory  writes  performed  by  the  calling  process or by the child process are also
              visible in the other process.  Moreover, any memory mapping or unmapping performed with mmap(2) or
              munmap(2) by the child or calling process also affects the other process.

              If CLONE_VM is not set, the child process runs in a separate copy  of  the  memory  space  of  the
              calling  process  at  the time of clone().  Memory writes or file mappings/unmappings performed by
              one of the processes do not affect the other, as with fork(2).

   The raw system call interface
       The raw clone() system call corresponds more closely to fork(2) in that execution in the child  continues
       from  the  point  of  the  call.   As  such, the fn and arg arguments of the clone() wrapper function are
       omitted.  Furthermore, the argument order changes.  The raw system call interface on x86 and  many  other
       architectures is roughly:

           long clone(unsigned long flags, void *child_stack,
                      void *ptid, void *ctid,
                      struct pt_regs *regs);

       Another  difference  for  the raw system call is that the child_stack argument may be zero, in which case
       copy-on-write semantics ensure that the child gets separate copies of stack  pages  when  either  process
       modifies the stack.  In this case, for correct operation, the CLONE_VM option should not be specified.

       For some architectures, the order of the arguments for the system call differs from that shown above.  On
       the  score, microblaze, ARM, ARM 64, PA-RISC, arc, Power PC, xtensa, and MIPS architectures, the order of
       the fourth and fifth arguments is reversed.  On the cris and s390 architectures, the order of  the  first
       and second arguments is reversed.

   blackfin, m68k, and sparc
       The argument-passing conventions on blackfin, m68k, and sparc are different from descriptions above.  For
       details, see the kernel (and glibc) source.

   ia64
       On ia64, a different interface is used:

       int __clone2(int (*fn)(void *),
                    void *child_stack_base, size_t stack_size,
                    int flags, void *arg, ...
                 /* pid_t *ptid, struct user_desc *tls, pid_t *ctid */ );

       The  prototype  shown above is for the glibc wrapper function; the raw system call interface has no fn or
       arg argument, and changes the order of the arguments so that flags is the first argument, and tls is  the
       last argument.

       __clone2() operates in the same way as clone(), except that child_stack_base points to the lowest address
       of the child's stack area, and stack_size specifies the size of the stack pointed to by child_stack_base.

   Linux 2.4 and earlier
       In Linux 2.4 and earlier, clone() does not take arguments ptid, tls, and ctid.

RETURN VALUE

       On  success,  the  thread  ID  of  the child process is returned in the caller's thread of execution.  On
       failure, -1 is returned in the caller's context, no child process will be created, and errno will be  set
       appropriately.

ERRORS

       EAGAIN Too many processes are already running.

       EINVAL CLONE_SIGHAND was specified, but CLONE_VM was not.  (Since Linux 2.6.0-test6.)

       EINVAL CLONE_THREAD was specified, but CLONE_SIGHAND was not.  (Since Linux 2.5.35.)

       EINVAL Both CLONE_FS and CLONE_NEWNS were specified in flags.

       EINVAL Both CLONE_NEWIPC and CLONE_SYSVSEM were specified in flags.

       EINVAL Both CLONE_NEWPID and CLONE_THREAD were specified in flags.

       EINVAL Returned by clone() when a zero value is specified for child_stack.

       EINVAL CLONE_NEWIPC was specified in flags, but the kernel was not configured with the CONFIG_SYSVIPC and
              CONFIG_IPC_NS options.

       EINVAL CLONE_NEWNET  was  specified  in  flags,  but the kernel was not configured with the CONFIG_NET_NS
              option.

       EINVAL CLONE_NEWPID was specified in flags, but the kernel was  not  configured  with  the  CONFIG_PID_NS
              option.

       EINVAL CLONE_NEWUTS was specified in flags, but the kernel was not configured with the CONFIG_UTS option.

       ENOMEM Cannot  allocate  sufficient  memory  to allocate a task structure for the child, or to copy those
              parts of the caller's context that need to be copied.

       EPERM  CLONE_NEWIPC, CLONE_NEWNET,  CLONE_NEWNS,  CLONE_NEWPID,  or  CLONE_NEWUTS  was  specified  by  an
              unprivileged process (process without CAP_SYS_ADMIN).

       EPERM  CLONE_PID was specified by a process other than process 0.

VERSIONS

       There is no entry for clone() in libc5.  glibc2 provides clone() as described in this manual page.

CONFORMING TO

       clone() is Linux-specific and should not be used in programs intended to be portable.

NOTES

       In the kernel 2.4.x series, CLONE_THREAD generally does not make the parent of the new thread the same as
       the  parent  of  the calling process.  However, for kernel versions 2.4.7 to 2.4.18 the CLONE_THREAD flag
       implied the CLONE_PARENT flag (as in kernel 2.6).

       For a while there was CLONE_DETACHED (introduced in 2.5.32): parent wants no child-exit signal.  In 2.6.2
       the need to give this together with CLONE_THREAD disappeared.  This flag is still  defined,  but  has  no
       effect.

       On i386, clone() should not be called through vsyscall, but directly through int $0x80.

BUGS

       Versions  of  the  GNU  C  library that include the NPTL threading library contain a wrapper function for
       getpid(2) that performs caching of PIDs.  This caching  relies  on  support  in  the  glibc  wrapper  for
       clone(),  but  as  currently  implemented,  the  cache  may  not be up to date in some circumstances.  In
       particular, if a signal is delivered to the child immediately after the clone()  call,  then  a  call  to
       getpid(2)  in  a  handler for the signal may return the PID of the calling process ("the parent"), if the
       clone wrapper has not yet had a chance to update the PID cache in the child.   (This  discussion  ignores
       the  case  where the child was created using CLONE_THREAD, when getpid(2) should return the same value in
       the child and in the process that called clone(), since the caller and the child are in the  same  thread
       group.  The stale-cache problem also does not occur if the flags argument includes CLONE_VM.)  To get the
       truth, it may be necessary to use code such as the following:

           #include <syscall.h>

           pid_t mypid;

           mypid = syscall(SYS_getpid);

EXAMPLE

   Create a child that executes in a separate UTS namespace
       The  following  program  demonstrates  the  use  of  clone() to create a child process that executes in a
       separate UTS namespace.  The child changes the hostname in its UTS namespace.  Both parent and child then
       display the system hostname, making it possible to see that the hostname differs in the UTS namespaces of
       the parent and child.  For an example of the use of this program, see setns(2).

       #define _GNU_SOURCE
       #include <sys/wait.h>
       #include <sys/utsname.h>
       #include <sched.h>
       #include <string.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <unistd.h>

       #define errExit(msg)    do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); \
                               } while (0)

       static int              /* Start function for cloned child */
       childFunc(void *arg)
       {
           struct utsname uts;

           /* Change hostname in UTS namespace of child */

           if (sethostname(arg, strlen(arg)) == -1)
               errExit("sethostname");

           /* Retrieve and display hostname */

           if (uname(&uts) == -1)
               errExit("uname");
           printf("uts.nodename in child:  %s\n", uts.nodename);

           /* Keep the namespace open for a while, by sleeping.
              This allows some experimentation--for example, another
              process might join the namespace. */

           sleep(200);

           return 0;           /* Child terminates now */
       }

       #define STACK_SIZE (1024 * 1024)    /* Stack size for cloned child */

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           char *stack;                    /* Start of stack buffer */
           char *stackTop;                 /* End of stack buffer */
           pid_t pid;
           struct utsname uts;

           if (argc < 2) {
               fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <child-hostname>\n", argv[0]);
               exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
           }

           /* Allocate stack for child */

           stack = malloc(STACK_SIZE);
           if (stack == NULL)
               errExit("malloc");
           stackTop = stack + STACK_SIZE;  /* Assume stack grows downward */

           /* Create child that has its own UTS namespace;
              child commences execution in childFunc() */

           pid = clone(childFunc, stackTop, CLONE_NEWUTS | SIGCHLD, argv[1]);
           if (pid == -1)
               errExit("clone");
           printf("clone() returned %ld\n", (long) pid);

           /* Parent falls through to here */

           sleep(1);           /* Give child time to change its hostname */

           /* Display hostname in parent's UTS namespace. This will be
              different from hostname in child's UTS namespace. */

           if (uname(&uts) == -1)
               errExit("uname");
           printf("uts.nodename in parent: %s\n", uts.nodename);

           if (waitpid(pid, NULL, 0) == -1)    /* Wait for child */
               errExit("waitpid");
           printf("child has terminated\n");

           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

SEE ALSO

       fork(2), futex(2),  getpid(2),  gettid(2),  kcmp(2),  set_thread_area(2),  set_tid_address(2),  setns(2),
       tkill(2), unshare(2), wait(2), capabilities(7), pthreads(7)

COLOPHON

       This  page  is  part  of  release 3.54 of the Linux man-pages project.  A description of the project, and
       information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Linux                                              2013-04-16                                           CLONE(2)