Job control refers to the protocol for allowing a user to move between multiple process groups (or jobs) within a single login session. The job control facilities are set up so that appropriate behavior for most programs happens automatically and they need not do anything special about job control. So you can probably ignore the material in this chapter unless you are writing a shell or login program.
You need to be familiar with concepts relating to process creation (see section 23.2 Process Creation Concepts) and signal handling (see section 21 Signal Handling) in order to understand this material presented in this chapter.
The fundamental purpose of an interactive shell is to read
commands from the user's terminal and create processes to execute the
programs specified by those commands. It can do this using the
fork
(see section 23.4 Creating a Process) and exec
(see section 23.5 Executing a File) functions.
A single command may run just one process--but often one command uses
several processes. If you use the `|' operator in a shell command,
you explicitly request several programs in their own processes. But
even if you run just one program, it can use multiple processes
internally. For example, a single compilation command such as `cc
-c foo.c' typically uses four processes (though normally only two at any
given time). If you run make
, its job is to run other programs
in separate processes.
The processes belonging to a single command are called a process
group or job. This is so that you can operate on all of them at
once. For example, typing C-c sends the signal SIGINT
to
terminate all the processes in the foreground process group.
A session is a larger group of processes. Normally all the processes that stem from a single login belong to the same session.
Every process belongs to a process group. When a process is created, it
becomes a member of the same process group and session as its parent
process. You can put it in another process group using the
setpgid
function, provided the process group belongs to the same
session.
The only way to put a process in a different session is to make it the
initial process of a new session, or a session leader, using the
setsid
function. This also puts the session leader into a new
process group, and you can't move it out of that process group again.
Usually, new sessions are created by the system login program, and the session leader is the process running the user's login shell.
A shell that supports job control must arrange to control which job can use the terminal at any time. Otherwise there might be multiple jobs trying to read from the terminal at once, and confusion about which process should receive the input typed by the user. To prevent this, the shell must cooperate with the terminal driver using the protocol described in this chapter.
The shell can give unlimited access to the controlling terminal to only one process group at a time. This is called the foreground job on that controlling terminal. Other process groups managed by the shell that are executing without such access to the terminal are called background jobs.
If a background job needs to read from its controlling
terminal, it is stopped by the terminal driver; if the
TOSTOP
mode is set, likewise for writing. The user can stop
a foreground job by typing the SUSP character (see section 12.4.9 Special Characters) and a program can stop any job by sending it a
SIGSTOP
signal. It's the responsibility of the shell to notice
when jobs stop, to notify the user about them, and to provide mechanisms
for allowing the user to interactively continue stopped jobs and switch
jobs between foreground and background.
See section 24.4 Access to the Controlling Terminal, for more information about I/O to the controlling terminal,
Not all operating systems support job control. The GNU system does support job control, but if you are using the GNU library on some other system, that system may not support job control itself.
You can use the _POSIX_JOB_CONTROL
macro to test at compile-time
whether the system supports job control. See section 28.2 Overall System Options.
If job control is not supported, then there can be only one process
group per session, which behaves as if it were always in the foreground.
The functions for creating additional process groups simply fail with
the error code ENOSYS
.
The macros naming the various job control signals (see section 21.2.5 Job Control Signals) are defined even if job control is not supported. However, the system never generates these signals, and attempts to send a job control signal or examine or specify their actions report errors or do nothing.
One of the attributes of a process is its controlling terminal. Child
processes created with fork
inherit the controlling terminal from
their parent process. In this way, all the processes in a session
inherit the controlling terminal from the session leader. A session
leader that has control of a terminal is called the controlling
process of that terminal.
You generally do not need to worry about the exact mechanism used to allocate a controlling terminal to a session, since it is done for you by the system when you log in.
An individual process disconnects from its controlling terminal when it
calls setsid
to become the leader of a new session.
See section 24.7.2 Process Group Functions.
Processes in the foreground job of a controlling terminal have unrestricted access to that terminal; background processes do not. This section describes in more detail what happens when a process in a background job tries to access its controlling terminal.
When a process in a background job tries to read from its controlling
terminal, the process group is usually sent a SIGTTIN
signal.
This normally causes all of the processes in that group to stop (unless
they handle the signal and don't stop themselves). However, if the
reading process is ignoring or blocking this signal, then read
fails with an EIO
error instead.
Similarly, when a process in a background job tries to write to its
controlling terminal, the default behavior is to send a SIGTTOU
signal to the process group. However, the behavior is modified by the
TOSTOP
bit of the local modes flags (see section 12.4.7 Local Modes). If
this bit is not set (which is the default), then writing to the
controlling terminal is always permitted without sending a signal.
Writing is also permitted if the SIGTTOU
signal is being ignored
or blocked by the writing process.
Most other terminal operations that a program can do are treated as reading or as writing. (The description of each operation should say which.)
For more information about the primitive read
and write
functions, see section 8.2 Input and Output Primitives.
When a controlling process terminates, its terminal becomes free and a new session can be established on it. (In fact, another user could log in on the terminal.) This could cause a problem if any processes from the old session are still trying to use that terminal.
To prevent problems, process groups that continue running even after the session leader has terminated are marked as orphaned process groups.
When a process group becomes an orphan, its processes are sent a
SIGHUP
signal. Ordinarily, this causes the processes to
terminate. However, if a program ignores this signal or establishes a
handler for it (see section 21 Signal Handling), it can continue running as in
the orphan process group even after its controlling process terminates;
but it still cannot access the terminal any more.
This section describes what a shell must do to implement job control, by presenting an extensive sample program to illustrate the concepts involved.
All of the program examples included in this chapter are part of a simple shell program. This section presents data structures and utility functions which are used throughout the example.
The sample shell deals mainly with two data structures. The
job
type contains information about a job, which is a
set of subprocesses linked together with pipes. The process
type
holds information about a single subprocess. Here are the relevant
data structure declarations:
/* A process is a single process. */ typedef struct process { struct process *next; /* next process in pipeline */ char **argv; /* for exec */ pid_t pid; /* process ID */ char completed; /* true if process has completed */ char stopped; /* true if process has stopped */ int status; /* reported status value */ } process; /* A job is a pipeline of processes. */ typedef struct job { struct job *next; /* next active job */ char *command; /* command line, used for messages */ process *first_process; /* list of processes in this job */ pid_t pgid; /* process group ID */ char notified; /* true if user told about stopped job */ struct termios tmodes; /* saved terminal modes */ int stdin, stdout, stderr; /* standard i/o channels */ } job; /* The active jobs are linked into a list. This is its head. */ job *first_job = NULL;
Here are some utility functions that are used for operating on job
objects.
/* Find the active job with the indicated pgid. */ job * find_job (pid_t pgid) { job *j; for (j = first_job; j; j = j->next) if (j->pgid == pgid) return j; return NULL; } /* Return true if all processes in the job have stopped or completed. */ int job_is_stopped (job *j) { process *p; for (p = j->first_process; p; p = p->next) if (!p->completed && !p->stopped) return 0; return 1; } /* Return true if all processes in the job have completed. */ int job_is_completed (job *j) { process *p; for (p = j->first_process; p; p = p->next) if (!p->completed) return 0; return 1; }
When a shell program that normally performs job control is started, it has to be careful in case it has been invoked from another shell that is already doing its own job control.
A subshell that runs interactively has to ensure that it has been placed
in the foreground by its parent shell before it can enable job control
itself. It does this by getting its initial process group ID with the
getpgrp
function, and comparing it to the process group ID of the
current foreground job associated with its controlling terminal (which
can be retrieved using the tcgetpgrp
function).
If the subshell is not running as a foreground job, it must stop itself
by sending a SIGTTIN
signal to its own process group. It may not
arbitrarily put itself into the foreground; it must wait for the user to
tell the parent shell to do this. If the subshell is continued again,
it should repeat the check and stop itself again if it is still not in
the foreground.
Once the subshell has been placed into the foreground by its parent
shell, it can enable its own job control. It does this by calling
setpgid
to put itself into its own process group, and then
calling tcsetpgrp
to place this process group into the
foreground.
When a shell enables job control, it should set itself to ignore all the
job control stop signals so that it doesn't accidentally stop itself.
You can do this by setting the action for all the stop signals to
SIG_IGN
.
A subshell that runs non-interactively cannot and should not support job control. It must leave all processes it creates in the same process group as the shell itself; this allows the non-interactive shell and its child processes to be treated as a single job by the parent shell. This is easy to do--just don't use any of the job control primitives--but you must remember to make the shell do it.
Here is the initialization code for the sample shell that shows how to do all of this.
/* Keep track of attributes of the shell. */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <termios.h> #include <unistd.h> pid_t shell_pgid; struct termios shell_tmodes; int shell_terminal; int shell_is_interactive; /* Make sure the shell is running interactively as the foreground job before proceeding. */ void init_shell () { /* See if we are running interactively. */ shell_terminal = STDIN_FILENO; shell_is_interactive = isatty (shell_terminal); if (shell_is_interactive) { /* Loop until we are in the foreground. */ while (tcgetpgrp (shell_terminal) != (shell_pgid = getpgrp ())) kill (- shell_pgid, SIGTTIN); /* Ignore interactive and job-control signals. */ signal (SIGINT, SIG_IGN); signal (SIGQUIT, SIG_IGN); signal (SIGTSTP, SIG_IGN); signal (SIGTTIN, SIG_IGN); signal (SIGTTOU, SIG_IGN); signal (SIGCHLD, SIG_IGN); /* Put ourselves in our own process group. */ shell_pgid = getpid (); if (setpgid (shell_pgid, shell_pgid) < 0) { perror ("Couldn't put the shell in its own process group"); exit (1); } /* Grab control of the terminal. */ tcsetpgrp (shell_terminal, shell_pgid); /* Save default terminal attributes for shell. */ tcgetattr (shell_terminal, &shell_tmodes); } }
Once the shell has taken responsibility for performing job control on its controlling terminal, it can launch jobs in response to commands typed by the user.
To create the processes in a process group, you use the same fork
and exec
functions described in section 23.2 Process Creation Concepts.
Since there are multiple child processes involved, though, things are a
little more complicated and you must be careful to do things in the
right order. Otherwise, nasty race conditions can result.
You have two choices for how to structure the tree of parent-child relationships among the processes. You can either make all the processes in the process group be children of the shell process, or you can make one process in group be the ancestor of all the other processes in that group. The sample shell program presented in this chapter uses the first approach because it makes bookkeeping somewhat simpler.
As each process is forked, it should put itself in the new process group
by calling setpgid
; see section 24.7.2 Process Group Functions. The first
process in the new group becomes its process group leader, and its
process ID becomes the process group ID for the group.
The shell should also call setpgid
to put each of its child
processes into the new process group. This is because there is a
potential timing problem: each child process must be put in the process
group before it begins executing a new program, and the shell depends on
having all the child processes in the group before it continues
executing. If both the child processes and the shell call
setpgid
, this ensures that the right things happen no matter which
process gets to it first.
If the job is being launched as a foreground job, the new process group
also needs to be put into the foreground on the controlling terminal
using tcsetpgrp
. Again, this should be done by the shell as well
as by each of its child processes, to avoid race conditions.
The next thing each child process should do is to reset its signal actions.
During initialization, the shell process set itself to ignore job
control signals; see section 24.6.2 Initializing the Shell. As a result, any child
processes it creates also ignore these signals by inheritance. This is
definitely undesirable, so each child process should explicitly set the
actions for these signals back to SIG_DFL
just after it is forked.
Since shells follow this convention, applications can assume that they
inherit the correct handling of these signals from the parent process.
But every application has a responsibility not to mess up the handling
of stop signals. Applications that disable the normal interpretation of
the SUSP character should provide some other mechanism for the user to
stop the job. When the user invokes this mechanism, the program should
send a SIGTSTP
signal to the process group of the process, not
just to the process itself. See section 21.6.2 Signaling Another Process.
Finally, each child process should call exec
in the normal way.
This is also the point at which redirection of the standard input and
output channels should be handled. See section 8.8 Duplicating Descriptors,
for an explanation of how to do this.
Here is the function from the sample shell program that is responsible for launching a program. The function is executed by each child process immediately after it has been forked by the shell, and never returns.
void launch_process (process *p, pid_t pgid, int infile, int outfile, int errfile, int foreground) { pid_t pid; if (shell_is_interactive) { /* Put the process into the process group and give the process group the terminal, if appropriate. This has to be done both by the shell and in the individual child processes because of potential race conditions. */ pid = getpid (); if (pgid == 0) pgid = pid; setpgid (pid, pgid); if (foreground) tcsetpgrp (shell_terminal, pgid); /* Set the handling for job control signals back to the default. */ signal (SIGINT, SIG_DFL); signal (SIGQUIT, SIG_DFL); signal (SIGTSTP, SIG_DFL); signal (SIGTTIN, SIG_DFL); signal (SIGTTOU, SIG_DFL); signal (SIGCHLD, SIG_DFL); } /* Set the standard input/output channels of the new process. */ if (infile != STDIN_FILENO) { dup2 (infile, STDIN_FILENO); close (infile); } if (outfile != STDOUT_FILENO) { dup2 (outfile, STDOUT_FILENO); close (outfile); } if (errfile != STDERR_FILENO) { dup2 (errfile, STDERR_FILENO); close (errfile); } /* Exec the new process. Make sure we exit. */ execvp (p->argv[0], p->argv); perror ("execvp"); exit (1); }
If the shell is not running interactively, this function does not do anything with process groups or signals. Remember that a shell not performing job control must keep all of its subprocesses in the same process group as the shell itself.
Next, here is the function that actually launches a complete job. After creating the child processes, this function calls some other functions to put the newly created job into the foreground or background; these are discussed in section 24.6.4 Foreground and Background.
void launch_job (job *j, int foreground) { process *p; pid_t pid; int mypipe[2], infile, outfile; infile = j->stdin; for (p = j->first_process; p; p = p->next) { /* Set up pipes, if necessary. */ if (p->next) { if (pipe (mypipe) < 0) { perror ("pipe"); exit (1); } outfile = mypipe[1]; } else outfile = j->stdout; /* Fork the child processes. */ pid = fork (); if (pid == 0) /* This is the child process. */ launch_process (p, j->pgid, infile, outfile, j->stderr, foreground); else if (pid < 0) { /* The fork failed. */ perror ("fork"); exit (1); } else { /* This is the parent process. */ p->pid = pid; if (shell_is_interactive) { if (!j->pgid) j->pgid = pid; setpgid (pid, j->pgid); } } /* Clean up after pipes. */ if (infile != j->stdin) close (infile); if (outfile != j->stdout) close (outfile); infile = mypipe[0]; } format_job_info (j, "launched"); if (!shell_is_interactive) wait_for_job (j); else if (foreground) put_job_in_foreground (j, 0); else put_job_in_background (j, 0); }
Now let's consider what actions must be taken by the shell when it launches a job into the foreground, and how this differs from what must be done when a background job is launched.
When a foreground job is launched, the shell must first give it access
to the controlling terminal by calling tcsetpgrp
. Then, the
shell should wait for processes in that process group to terminate or
stop. This is discussed in more detail in section 24.6.5 Stopped and Terminated Jobs.
When all of the processes in the group have either completed or stopped,
the shell should regain control of the terminal for its own process
group by calling tcsetpgrp
again. Since stop signals caused by
I/O from a background process or a SUSP character typed by the user
are sent to the process group, normally all the processes in the job
stop together.
The foreground job may have left the terminal in a strange state, so the
shell should restore its own saved terminal modes before continuing. In
case the job is merely been stopped, the shell should first save the
current terminal modes so that it can restore them later if the job is
continued. The functions for dealing with terminal modes are
tcgetattr
and tcsetattr
; these are described in
section 12.4 Terminal Modes.
Here is the sample shell's function for doing all of this.
/* Put job j in the foreground. If cont is nonzero,
restore the saved terminal modes and send the process group a
SIGCONT
signal to wake it up before we block. */
void
put_job_in_foreground (job *j, int cont)
{
/* Put the job into the foreground. */
tcsetpgrp (shell_terminal, j->pgid);
/* Send the job a continue signal, if necessary. */
if (cont)
{
tcsetattr (shell_terminal, TCSADRAIN, &j->tmodes);
if (kill (- j->pgid, SIGCONT) < 0)
perror ("kill (SIGCONT)");
}
/* Wait for it to report. */
wait_for_job (j);
/* Put the shell back in the foreground. */
tcsetpgrp (shell_terminal, shell_pgid);
/* Restore the shell's terminal modes. */
tcgetattr (shell_terminal, &j->tmodes);
tcsetattr (shell_terminal, TCSADRAIN, &shell_tmodes);
}
If the process group is launched as a background job, the shell should remain in the foreground itself and continue to read commands from the terminal.
In the sample shell, there is not much that needs to be done to put a job into the background. Here is the function it uses:
/* Put a job in the background. If the cont argument is true, send
the process group a SIGCONT
signal to wake it up. */
void
put_job_in_background (job *j, int cont)
{
/* Send the job a continue signal, if necessary. */
if (cont)
if (kill (-j->pgid, SIGCONT) < 0)
perror ("kill (SIGCONT)");
}
When a foreground process is launched, the shell must block until all of
the processes in that job have either terminated or stopped. It can do
this by calling the waitpid
function; see section 23.6 Process Completion. Use the WUNTRACED
option so that status is reported
for processes that stop as well as processes that terminate.
The shell must also check on the status of background jobs so that it
can report terminated and stopped jobs to the user; this can be done by
calling waitpid
with the WNOHANG
option. A good place to
put a such a check for terminated and stopped jobs is just before
prompting for a new command.
The shell can also receive asynchronous notification that there is
status information available for a child process by establishing a
handler for SIGCHLD
signals. See section 21 Signal Handling.
In the sample shell program, the SIGCHLD
signal is normally
ignored. This is to avoid reentrancy problems involving the global data
structures the shell manipulates. But at specific times when the shell
is not using these data structures--such as when it is waiting for
input on the terminal--it makes sense to enable a handler for
SIGCHLD
. The same function that is used to do the synchronous
status checks (do_job_notification
, in this case) can also be
called from within this handler.
Here are the parts of the sample shell program that deal with checking the status of jobs and reporting the information to the user.
/* Store the status of the process pid that was returned by waitpid. Return 0 if all went well, nonzero otherwise. */ int mark_process_status (pid_t pid, int status) { job *j; process *p; if (pid > 0) { /* Update the record for the process. */ for (j = first_job; j; j = j->next) for (p = j->first_process; p; p = p->next) if (p->pid == pid) { p->status = status; if (WIFSTOPPED (status)) p->stopped = 1; else { p->completed = 1; if (WIFSIGNALED (status)) fprintf (stderr, "%d: Terminated by signal %d.\n", (int) pid, WTERMSIG (p->status)); } return 0; } fprintf (stderr, "No child process %d.\n", pid); return -1; } else if (pid == 0 || errno == ECHILD) /* No processes ready to report. */ return -1; else { /* Other weird errors. */ perror ("waitpid"); return -1; } } /* Check for processes that have status information available, without blocking. */ void update_status (void) { int status; pid_t pid; do pid = waitpid (WAIT_ANY, &status, WUNTRACED|WNOHANG); while (!mark_process_status (pid, status)); } /* Check for processes that have status information available, blocking until all processes in the given job have reported. */ void wait_for_job (job *j) { int status; pid_t pid; do pid = waitpid (WAIT_ANY, &status, WUNTRACED); while (!mark_process_status (pid, status) && !job_is_stopped (j) && !job_is_completed (j)); } /* Format information about job status for the user to look at. */ void format_job_info (job *j, const char *status) { fprintf (stderr, "%ld (%s): %s\n", (long)j->pgid, status, j->command); } /* Notify the user about stopped or terminated jobs. Delete terminated jobs from the active job list. */ void do_job_notification (void) { job *j, *jlast, *jnext; process *p; /* Update status information for child processes. */ update_status (); jlast = NULL; for (j = first_job; j; j = jnext) { jnext = j->next; /* If all processes have completed, tell the user the job has completed and delete it from the list of active jobs. */ if (job_is_completed (j)) { format_job_info (j, "completed"); if (jlast) jlast->next = jnext; else first_job = jnext; free_job (j); } /* Notify the user about stopped jobs, marking them so that we won't do this more than once. */ else if (job_is_stopped (j) && !j->notified) { format_job_info (j, "stopped"); j->notified = 1; jlast = j; } /* Don't say anything about jobs that are still running. */ else jlast = j; } }
The shell can continue a stopped job by sending a SIGCONT
signal
to its process group. If the job is being continued in the foreground,
the shell should first invoke tcsetpgrp
to give the job access to
the terminal, and restore the saved terminal settings. After continuing
a job in the foreground, the shell should wait for the job to stop or
complete, as if the job had just been launched in the foreground.
The sample shell program handles both newly created and continued jobs
with the same pair of functions, put_job_in_foreground
and
put_job_in_background
. The definitions of these functions
were given in section 24.6.4 Foreground and Background. When continuing a
stopped job, a nonzero value is passed as the cont argument to
ensure that the SIGCONT
signal is sent and the terminal modes
reset, as appropriate.
This leaves only a function for updating the shell's internal bookkeeping about the job being continued:
/* Mark a stopped job J as being running again. */ void mark_job_as_running (job *j) { Process *p; for (p = j->first_process; p; p = p->next) p->stopped = 0; j->notified = 0; } /* Continue the job J. */ void continue_job (job *j, int foreground) { mark_job_as_running (j); if (foreground) put_job_in_foreground (j, 1); else put_job_in_background (j, 1); }
The code extracts for the sample shell included in this chapter are only
a part of the entire shell program. In particular, nothing at all has
been said about how job
and program
data structures are
allocated and initialized.
Most real shells provide a complex user interface that has support for a command language; variables; abbreviations, substitutions, and pattern matching on file names; and the like. All of this is far too complicated to explain here! Instead, we have concentrated on showing how to implement the core process creation and job control functions that can be called from such a shell.
Here is a table summarizing the major entry points we have presented:
void init_shell (void)
void launch_job (job *j, int foreground)
void do_job_notification (void)
SIGCHLD
signals.
See section 24.6.5 Stopped and Terminated Jobs.
void continue_job (job *j, int foreground)
Of course, a real shell would also want to provide other functions for
managing jobs. For example, it would be useful to have commands to list
all active jobs or to send a signal (such as SIGKILL
) to a job.
This section contains detailed descriptions of the functions relating to job control.
You can use the ctermid
function to get a file name that you can
use to open the controlling terminal. In the GNU library, it returns
the same string all the time: "/dev/tty"
. That is a special
"magic" file name that refers to the controlling terminal of the
current process (if it has one). To find the name of the specific
terminal device, use ttyname
; see section 12.1 Identifying Terminals.
The function ctermid
is declared in the header file
`stdio.h'.
ctermid
function returns a string containing the file name of
the controlling terminal for the current process. If string is
not a null pointer, it should be an array that can hold at least
L_ctermid
characters; the string is returned in this array.
Otherwise, a pointer to a string in a static area is returned, which
might get overwritten on subsequent calls to this function.
An empty string is returned if the file name cannot be determined for any reason. Even if a file name is returned, access to the file it represents is not guaranteed.
ctermid
.
See also the isatty
and ttyname
functions, in
section 12.1 Identifying Terminals.
Here are descriptions of the functions for manipulating process groups. Your program should include the header files `sys/types.h' and `unistd.h' to use these functions.
setsid
function creates a new session. The calling process
becomes the session leader, and is put in a new process group whose
process group ID is the same as the process ID of that process. There
are initially no other processes in the new process group, and no other
process groups in the new session.
This function also makes the calling process have no controlling terminal.
The setsid
function returns the new process group ID of the
calling process if successful. A return value of -1
indicates an
error. The following errno
error conditions are defined for this
function:
EPERM
The getpgrp
function has two definitions: one derived from BSD
Unix, and one from the POSIX.1 standard. The feature test macros you
have selected (see section 1.3.4 Feature Test Macros) determine which definition
you get. Specifically, you get the BSD version if you define
_BSD_SOURCE
; otherwise, you get the POSIX version if you define
_POSIX_SOURCE
or _GNU_SOURCE
. Programs written for old
BSD systems will not include `unistd.h', which defines
getpgrp
specially under _BSD_SOURCE
. You must link such
programs with the -lbsd-compat
option to get the BSD definition.
getpgrp
returns the process group ID of
the calling process.
getpgrp
returns the process group ID of the
process pid. You can supply a value of 0
for the pid
argument to get information about the calling process.
setpgid
function puts the process pid into the process
group pgid. As a special case, either pid or pgid can
be zero to indicate the process ID of the calling process.
This function fails on a system that does not support job control. See section 24.2 Job Control is Optional, for more information.
If the operation is successful, setpgid
returns zero. Otherwise
it returns -1
. The following errno
error conditions are
defined for this function:
EACCES
exec
function since it was forked.
EINVAL
ENOSYS
EPERM
ESRCH
setpgid
. Both functions do exactly
the same thing.
These are the functions for reading or setting the foreground process group of a terminal. You should include the header files `sys/types.h' and `unistd.h' in your application to use these functions.
Although these functions take a file descriptor argument to specify the terminal device, the foreground job is associated with the terminal file itself and not a particular open file descriptor.
If there is no foreground process group, the return value is a number
greater than 1
that does not match the process group ID of any
existing process group. This can happen if all of the processes in the
job that was formerly the foreground job have terminated, and no other
job has yet been moved into the foreground.
In case of an error, a value of -1
is returned. The
following errno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EBADF
ENOSYS
ENOTTY
For terminal access purposes, this function is treated as output. If it
is called from a background process on its controlling terminal,
normally all processes in the process group are sent a SIGTTOU
signal. The exception is if the calling process itself is ignoring or
blocking SIGTTOU
signals, in which case the operation is
performed and no signal is sent.
If successful, tcsetpgrp
returns 0
. A return value of
-1
indicates an error. The following errno
error
conditions are defined for this function:
EBADF
EINVAL
ENOSYS
ENOTTY
EPERM
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