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- /* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
- * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
- * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
- * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
- * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
- * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
- *
- * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- *
- * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
- * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
- * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
- * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
- * limitations under the License.
- */
- #ifndef APR_THREAD_PROC_H
- #define APR_THREAD_PROC_H
- /**
- * @file apr_thread_proc.h
- * @brief APR Thread and Process Library
- */
- #include "apr.h"
- #include "apr_file_io.h"
- #include "apr_pools.h"
- #include "apr_errno.h"
- #include "apr_perms_set.h"
- #if APR_HAVE_STRUCT_RLIMIT
- #include <sys/time.h>
- #include <sys/resource.h>
- #endif
- #ifdef __cplusplus
- extern "C" {
- #endif /* __cplusplus */
- /**
- * @defgroup apr_thread_proc Threads and Process Functions
- * @ingroup APR
- * @{
- */
- typedef enum {
- APR_SHELLCMD, /**< use the shell to invoke the program */
- APR_PROGRAM, /**< invoke the program directly, no copied env */
- APR_PROGRAM_ENV, /**< invoke the program, replicating our environment */
- APR_PROGRAM_PATH, /**< find program on PATH, use our environment */
- APR_SHELLCMD_ENV /**< use the shell to invoke the program,
- * replicating our environment
- */
- } apr_cmdtype_e;
- typedef enum {
- APR_WAIT, /**< wait for the specified process to finish */
- APR_NOWAIT /**< do not wait -- just see if it has finished */
- } apr_wait_how_e;
- /* I am specifically calling out the values so that the macros below make
- * more sense. Yes, I know I don't need to, but I am hoping this makes what
- * I am doing more clear. If you want to add more reasons to exit, continue
- * to use bitmasks.
- */
- typedef enum {
- APR_PROC_EXIT = 1, /**< process exited normally */
- APR_PROC_SIGNAL = 2, /**< process exited due to a signal */
- APR_PROC_SIGNAL_CORE = 4 /**< process exited and dumped a core file */
- } apr_exit_why_e;
- /** did we exit the process */
- #define APR_PROC_CHECK_EXIT(x) (x & APR_PROC_EXIT)
- /** did we get a signal */
- #define APR_PROC_CHECK_SIGNALED(x) (x & APR_PROC_SIGNAL)
- /** did we get core */
- #define APR_PROC_CHECK_CORE_DUMP(x) (x & APR_PROC_SIGNAL_CORE)
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set */
- #define APR_NO_PIPE 0
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set and apr_file_pipe_create_ex */
- #define APR_FULL_BLOCK 1
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set and apr_file_pipe_create_ex */
- #define APR_FULL_NONBLOCK 2
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set */
- #define APR_PARENT_BLOCK 3
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set */
- #define APR_CHILD_BLOCK 4
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set */
- #define APR_NO_FILE 8
- /** @see apr_file_pipe_create_ex */
- #define APR_READ_BLOCK 3
- /** @see apr_file_pipe_create_ex */
- #define APR_WRITE_BLOCK 4
- /** @see apr_procattr_io_set
- * @note Win32 only effective with version 1.2.12, portably introduced in 1.3.0
- */
- #define APR_NO_FILE 8
- /** @see apr_procattr_limit_set */
- #define APR_LIMIT_CPU 0
- /** @see apr_procattr_limit_set */
- #define APR_LIMIT_MEM 1
- /** @see apr_procattr_limit_set */
- #define APR_LIMIT_NPROC 2
- /** @see apr_procattr_limit_set */
- #define APR_LIMIT_NOFILE 3
- /**
- * @defgroup APR_OC Other Child Flags
- * @{
- */
- #define APR_OC_REASON_DEATH 0 /**< child has died, caller must call
- * unregister still */
- #define APR_OC_REASON_UNWRITABLE 1 /**< write_fd is unwritable */
- #define APR_OC_REASON_RESTART 2 /**< a restart is occurring, perform
- * any necessary cleanup (including
- * sending a special signal to child)
- */
- #define APR_OC_REASON_UNREGISTER 3 /**< unregister has been called, do
- * whatever is necessary (including
- * kill the child) */
- #define APR_OC_REASON_LOST 4 /**< somehow the child exited without
- * us knowing ... buggy os? */
- #define APR_OC_REASON_RUNNING 5 /**< a health check is occurring,
- * for most maintainence functions
- * this is a no-op.
- */
- /** @} */
- /** The APR process type */
- typedef struct apr_proc_t {
- /** The process ID */
- pid_t pid;
- /** Parent's side of pipe to child's stdin */
- apr_file_t *in;
- /** Parent's side of pipe to child's stdout */
- apr_file_t *out;
- /** Parent's side of pipe to child's stdouterr */
- apr_file_t *err;
- #if APR_HAS_PROC_INVOKED || defined(DOXYGEN)
- /** Diagnositics/debugging string of the command invoked for
- * this process [only present if APR_HAS_PROC_INVOKED is true]
- * @remark Only enabled on Win32 by default.
- * @bug This should either always or never be present in release
- * builds - since it breaks binary compatibility. We may enable
- * it always in APR 1.0 yet leave it undefined in most cases.
- */
- char *invoked;
- #endif
- #if defined(WIN32) || defined(DOXYGEN)
- /** (Win32 only) Creator's handle granting access to the process
- * @remark This handle is closed and reset to NULL in every case
- * corresponding to a waitpid() on Unix which returns the exit status.
- * Therefore Win32 correspond's to Unix's zombie reaping characteristics
- * and avoids potential handle leaks.
- */
- HANDLE hproc;
- #endif
- } apr_proc_t;
- /**
- * The prototype for APR child errfn functions. (See the description
- * of apr_procattr_child_errfn_set() for more information.)
- * It is passed the following parameters:
- * @param pool Pool associated with the apr_proc_t. If your child
- * error function needs user data, associate it with this
- * pool.
- * @param err APR error code describing the error
- * @param description Text description of type of processing which failed
- */
- typedef void (apr_child_errfn_t)(apr_pool_t *proc, apr_status_t err,
- const char *description);
- /** Opaque Thread structure. */
- typedef struct apr_thread_t apr_thread_t;
- /** Opaque Thread attributes structure. */
- typedef struct apr_threadattr_t apr_threadattr_t;
- /** Opaque Process attributes structure. */
- typedef struct apr_procattr_t apr_procattr_t;
- /** Opaque control variable for one-time atomic variables. */
- typedef struct apr_thread_once_t apr_thread_once_t;
- /** Opaque thread private address space. */
- typedef struct apr_threadkey_t apr_threadkey_t;
- /** Opaque record of child process. */
- typedef struct apr_other_child_rec_t apr_other_child_rec_t;
- /**
- * The prototype for any APR thread worker functions.
- */
- typedef void *(APR_THREAD_FUNC *apr_thread_start_t)(apr_thread_t*, void*);
- typedef enum {
- APR_KILL_NEVER, /**< process is never killed (i.e., never sent
- * any signals), but it will be reaped if it exits
- * before the pool is cleaned up */
- APR_KILL_ALWAYS, /**< process is sent SIGKILL on apr_pool_t cleanup */
- APR_KILL_AFTER_TIMEOUT, /**< SIGTERM, wait 3 seconds, SIGKILL */
- APR_JUST_WAIT, /**< wait forever for the process to complete */
- APR_KILL_ONLY_ONCE /**< send SIGTERM and then wait */
- } apr_kill_conditions_e;
- /* Thread Function definitions */
- #if APR_HAS_THREADS
- /**
- * Create and initialize a new threadattr variable
- * @param new_attr The newly created threadattr.
- * @param cont The pool to use
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadattr_create(apr_threadattr_t **new_attr,
- apr_pool_t *cont);
- /**
- * Set if newly created threads should be created in detached state.
- * @param attr The threadattr to affect
- * @param on Non-zero if detached threads should be created.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadattr_detach_set(apr_threadattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t on);
- /**
- * Get the detach state for this threadattr.
- * @param attr The threadattr to reference
- * @return APR_DETACH if threads are to be detached, or APR_NOTDETACH
- * if threads are to be joinable.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadattr_detach_get(apr_threadattr_t *attr);
- /**
- * Set the stack size of newly created threads.
- * @param attr The threadattr to affect
- * @param stacksize The stack size in bytes
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadattr_stacksize_set(apr_threadattr_t *attr,
- apr_size_t stacksize);
- /**
- * Set the stack guard area size of newly created threads.
- * @param attr The threadattr to affect
- * @param guardsize The stack guard area size in bytes
- * @note Thread library implementations commonly use a "guard area"
- * after each thread's stack which is not readable or writable such that
- * stack overflows cause a segfault; this consumes e.g. 4K of memory
- * and increases memory management overhead. Setting the guard area
- * size to zero hence trades off reliable behaviour on stack overflow
- * for performance. */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadattr_guardsize_set(apr_threadattr_t *attr,
- apr_size_t guardsize);
- /**
- * Create a new thread of execution
- * @param new_thread The newly created thread handle.
- * @param attr The threadattr to use to determine how to create the thread
- * @param func The function to start the new thread in
- * @param data Any data to be passed to the starting function
- * @param cont The pool to use
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_create(apr_thread_t **new_thread,
- apr_threadattr_t *attr,
- apr_thread_start_t func,
- void *data, apr_pool_t *cont);
- /**
- * stop the current thread
- * @param thd The thread to stop
- * @param retval The return value to pass back to any thread that cares
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_exit(apr_thread_t *thd,
- apr_status_t retval);
- /**
- * block until the desired thread stops executing.
- * @param retval The return value from the dead thread.
- * @param thd The thread to join
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_join(apr_status_t *retval,
- apr_thread_t *thd);
- /**
- * force the current thread to yield the processor
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_thread_yield(void);
- /**
- * Initialize the control variable for apr_thread_once. If this isn't
- * called, apr_initialize won't work.
- * @param control The control variable to initialize
- * @param p The pool to allocate data from.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_once_init(apr_thread_once_t **control,
- apr_pool_t *p);
- /**
- * Run the specified function one time, regardless of how many threads
- * call it.
- * @param control The control variable. The same variable should
- * be passed in each time the function is tried to be
- * called. This is how the underlying functions determine
- * if the function has ever been called before.
- * @param func The function to call.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_once(apr_thread_once_t *control,
- void (*func)(void));
- /**
- * detach a thread
- * @param thd The thread to detach
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_detach(apr_thread_t *thd);
- /**
- * Return user data associated with the current thread.
- * @param data The user data associated with the thread.
- * @param key The key to associate with the data
- * @param thread The currently open thread.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_data_get(void **data, const char *key,
- apr_thread_t *thread);
- /**
- * Set user data associated with the current thread.
- * @param data The user data to associate with the thread.
- * @param key The key to use for associating the data with the thread
- * @param cleanup The cleanup routine to use when the thread is destroyed.
- * @param thread The currently open thread.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_thread_data_set(void *data, const char *key,
- apr_status_t (*cleanup) (void *),
- apr_thread_t *thread);
- /**
- * Create and initialize a new thread private address space
- * @param key The thread private handle.
- * @param dest The destructor to use when freeing the private memory.
- * @param cont The pool to use
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadkey_private_create(apr_threadkey_t **key,
- void (*dest)(void *),
- apr_pool_t *cont);
- /**
- * Get a pointer to the thread private memory
- * @param new_mem The data stored in private memory
- * @param key The handle for the desired thread private memory
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadkey_private_get(void **new_mem,
- apr_threadkey_t *key);
- /**
- * Set the data to be stored in thread private memory
- * @param priv The data to be stored in private memory
- * @param key The handle for the desired thread private memory
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadkey_private_set(void *priv,
- apr_threadkey_t *key);
- /**
- * Free the thread private memory
- * @param key The handle for the desired thread private memory
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadkey_private_delete(apr_threadkey_t *key);
- /**
- * Return the pool associated with the current threadkey.
- * @param data The user data associated with the threadkey.
- * @param key The key associated with the data
- * @param threadkey The currently open threadkey.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadkey_data_get(void **data, const char *key,
- apr_threadkey_t *threadkey);
- /**
- * Return the pool associated with the current threadkey.
- * @param data The data to set.
- * @param key The key to associate with the data.
- * @param cleanup The cleanup routine to use when the file is destroyed.
- * @param threadkey The currently open threadkey.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_threadkey_data_set(void *data, const char *key,
- apr_status_t (*cleanup) (void *),
- apr_threadkey_t *threadkey);
- #endif
- /**
- * Create and initialize a new procattr variable
- * @param new_attr The newly created procattr.
- * @param cont The pool to use
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_create(apr_procattr_t **new_attr,
- apr_pool_t *cont);
- /**
- * Determine if any of stdin, stdout, or stderr should be linked to pipes
- * when starting a child process.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param in Should stdin be a pipe back to the parent?
- * @param out Should stdout be a pipe back to the parent?
- * @param err Should stderr be a pipe back to the parent?
- * @note If APR_NO_PIPE, there will be no special channel, the child
- * inherits the parent's corresponding stdio stream. If APR_NO_FILE is
- * specified, that corresponding stream is closed in the child (and will
- * be INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE when inspected on Win32). This can have ugly
- * side effects, as the next file opened in the child on Unix will fall
- * into the stdio stream fd slot!
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_io_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t in, apr_int32_t out,
- apr_int32_t err);
- /**
- * Set the child_in and/or parent_in values to existing apr_file_t values.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param child_in apr_file_t value to use as child_in. Must be a valid file.
- * @param parent_in apr_file_t value to use as parent_in. Must be a valid file.
- * @remark This is NOT a required initializer function. This is
- * useful if you have already opened a pipe (or multiple files)
- * that you wish to use, perhaps persistently across multiple
- * process invocations - such as a log file. You can save some
- * extra function calls by not creating your own pipe since this
- * creates one in the process space for you.
- * @bug Note that calling this function with two NULL files on some platforms
- * creates an APR_FULL_BLOCK pipe, but this behavior is neither portable nor
- * is it supported. @see apr_procattr_io_set instead for simple pipes.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_child_in_set(struct apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_file_t *child_in,
- apr_file_t *parent_in);
- /**
- * Set the child_out and parent_out values to existing apr_file_t values.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param child_out apr_file_t value to use as child_out. Must be a valid file.
- * @param parent_out apr_file_t value to use as parent_out. Must be a valid file.
- * @remark This is NOT a required initializer function. This is
- * useful if you have already opened a pipe (or multiple files)
- * that you wish to use, perhaps persistently across multiple
- * process invocations - such as a log file.
- * @bug Note that calling this function with two NULL files on some platforms
- * creates an APR_FULL_BLOCK pipe, but this behavior is neither portable nor
- * is it supported. @see apr_procattr_io_set instead for simple pipes.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_child_out_set(struct apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_file_t *child_out,
- apr_file_t *parent_out);
- /**
- * Set the child_err and parent_err values to existing apr_file_t values.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param child_err apr_file_t value to use as child_err. Must be a valid file.
- * @param parent_err apr_file_t value to use as parent_err. Must be a valid file.
- * @remark This is NOT a required initializer function. This is
- * useful if you have already opened a pipe (or multiple files)
- * that you wish to use, perhaps persistently across multiple
- * process invocations - such as a log file.
- * @bug Note that calling this function with two NULL files on some platforms
- * creates an APR_FULL_BLOCK pipe, but this behavior is neither portable nor
- * is it supported. @see apr_procattr_io_set instead for simple pipes.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_child_err_set(struct apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_file_t *child_err,
- apr_file_t *parent_err);
- /**
- * Set which directory the child process should start executing in.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param dir Which dir to start in. By default, this is the same dir as
- * the parent currently resides in, when the createprocess call
- * is made.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_dir_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- const char *dir);
- /**
- * Set what type of command the child process will call.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param cmd The type of command. One of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_SHELLCMD -- Anything that the shell can handle
- * APR_PROGRAM -- Executable program (default)
- * APR_PROGRAM_ENV -- Executable program, copy environment
- * APR_PROGRAM_PATH -- Executable program on PATH, copy env
- * </PRE>
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_cmdtype_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_cmdtype_e cmd);
- /**
- * Determine if the child should start in detached state.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param detach Should the child start in detached state? Default is no.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_detach_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t detach);
- /**
- * Request OS to tie child-process lifespan to parent process.
- * (Currently supported only on Windows.)
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param autokill Nonzero means child lifespan will be tied to calling
- * process lifespan. Default is no.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_autokill_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t autokill);
- // APR_HAS_PROCATTR_AUTOKILL_SET actually has three discernable states. Plain
- // APR doesn't define it, so #if ! defined(APR_HAS_PROCATTR_AUTOKILL_SET) can
- // detect if the APR in hand lacks the extension. Further, though, we #define
- // it to 0 on platforms where we happen to know apr_procattr_autokill_set()
- // will return APR_ENOTIMPL.
- // It doesn't seem to work to #define MACRO as defined(OTHERMACRO) because
- // apparently defined() isn't itself a macro; it doesn't get rescanned. From
- // the preprocessor's point of view, MACRO simply has a funny string value.
- #if defined(WIN32) || defined(_WIN32)
- #define APR_HAS_PROCATTR_AUTOKILL_SET 1 // useful implementation
- #else
- #define APR_HAS_PROCATTR_AUTOKILL_SET 0 // placeholder implementation
- #endif
- /**
- * Request apr_proc_create() to constrain the set of handles passed to the
- * child process. On Windows, with an ordinary CreateProcess() call, you get
- * two choices: pass NO handles (bInheritHandles=FALSE), or pass ALL
- * currently-open handles, from anywhere in the process (including libraries!)
- * -- except those specifically marked with HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT 0.
- * apr_proc_create(), which promises to provide the child process with stdin,
- * stdout, stderr, normally passes bInheritHandles=TRUE. But std::ofstream et
- * al. open files as inheritable, and provide no API by which to mark them
- * otherwise. And since Windows prevents certain operations on files held open
- * by any process, even if inadvertently, confusing bugs ensue.
- * Calling apr_procattr_constrain_handle_set(attr, 1) engages obscure
- * Windows machinery to specifically pass stdin, stdout, stderr -- but no
- * other handles.
- * See http://blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2011/12/16/10248328.aspx .
- * apr_procattr_constrain_handle_set() currently only affects apr_proc_create()
- * on Windows.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param constrain On Windows, nonzero means to explicitly constrain the set
- * of handles passed to the new child process. Default is 0, like unmodified
- * APR.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_constrain_handle_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t constrain);
- #define APR_HAS_PROCATTR_CONSTRAIN_HANDLE_SET 1 // extension is present
- #if APR_HAVE_STRUCT_RLIMIT
- /**
- * Set the Resource Utilization limits when starting a new process.
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param what Which limit to set, one of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_LIMIT_CPU
- * APR_LIMIT_MEM
- * APR_LIMIT_NPROC
- * APR_LIMIT_NOFILE
- * </PRE>
- * @param limit Value to set the limit to.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_limit_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t what,
- struct rlimit *limit);
- #endif
- /**
- * Specify an error function to be called in the child process if APR
- * encounters an error in the child prior to running the specified program.
- * @param attr The procattr describing the child process to be created.
- * @param errfn The function to call in the child process.
- * @remark At the present time, it will only be called from apr_proc_create()
- * on platforms where fork() is used. It will never be called on other
- * platforms, on those platforms apr_proc_create() will return the error
- * in the parent process rather than invoke the callback in the now-forked
- * child process.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_child_errfn_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_child_errfn_t *errfn);
- /**
- * Specify that apr_proc_create() should do whatever it can to report
- * failures to the caller of apr_proc_create(), rather than find out in
- * the child.
- * @param attr The procattr describing the child process to be created.
- * @param chk Flag to indicate whether or not extra work should be done
- * to try to report failures to the caller.
- * @remark This flag only affects apr_proc_create() on platforms where
- * fork() is used. This leads to extra overhead in the calling
- * process, but that may help the application handle such
- * errors more gracefully.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_error_check_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t chk);
- /**
- * Determine if the child should start in its own address space or using the
- * current one from its parent
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param addrspace Should the child start in its own address space? Default
- * is no on NetWare and yes on other platforms.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_addrspace_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_int32_t addrspace);
- /**
- * Set the username used for running process
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param username The username used
- * @param password User password if needed. Password is needed on WIN32
- * or any other platform having
- * APR_PROCATTR_USER_SET_REQUIRES_PASSWORD set.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_user_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- const char *username,
- const char *password);
- /**
- * Set the group used for running process
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param groupname The group name used
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_group_set(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- const char *groupname);
- /**
- * Register permission set function
- * @param attr The procattr we care about.
- * @param perms_set_fn Permission set callback
- * @param data Data to pass to permission callback function
- * @param perms Permissions to set
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_procattr_perms_set_register(apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_perms_setfn_t *perms_set_fn,
- void *data,
- apr_fileperms_t perms);
- #if APR_HAS_FORK
- /**
- * This is currently the only non-portable call in APR. This executes
- * a standard unix fork.
- * @param proc The resulting process handle.
- * @param cont The pool to use.
- * @remark returns APR_INCHILD for the child, and APR_INPARENT for the parent
- * or an error.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_fork(apr_proc_t *proc, apr_pool_t *cont);
- #endif
- /**
- * Create a new process and execute a new program within that process.
- * @param new_proc The resulting process handle.
- * @param progname The program to run
- * @param args the arguments to pass to the new program. The first
- * one should be the program name.
- * @param env The new environment table for the new process. This
- * should be a list of NULL-terminated strings. This argument
- * is ignored for APR_PROGRAM_ENV, APR_PROGRAM_PATH, and
- * APR_SHELLCMD_ENV types of commands.
- * @param attr the procattr we should use to determine how to create the new
- * process
- * @param pool The pool to use.
- * @note This function returns without waiting for the new process to terminate;
- * use apr_proc_wait for that.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_create(apr_proc_t *new_proc,
- const char *progname,
- const char * const *args,
- const char * const *env,
- apr_procattr_t *attr,
- apr_pool_t *pool);
- /**
- * Wait for a child process to die
- * @param proc The process handle that corresponds to the desired child process
- * @param exitcode The returned exit status of the child, if a child process
- * dies, or the signal that caused the child to die.
- * On platforms that don't support obtaining this information,
- * the status parameter will be returned as APR_ENOTIMPL.
- * @param exitwhy Why the child died, the bitwise or of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_PROC_EXIT -- process terminated normally
- * APR_PROC_SIGNAL -- process was killed by a signal
- * APR_PROC_SIGNAL_CORE -- process was killed by a signal, and
- * generated a core dump.
- * </PRE>
- * @param waithow How should we wait. One of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_WAIT -- block until the child process dies.
- * APR_NOWAIT -- return immediately regardless of if the
- * child is dead or not.
- * </PRE>
- * @remark The child's status is in the return code to this process. It is one of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_CHILD_DONE -- child is no longer running.
- * APR_CHILD_NOTDONE -- child is still running.
- * </PRE>
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_wait(apr_proc_t *proc,
- int *exitcode, apr_exit_why_e *exitwhy,
- apr_wait_how_e waithow);
- /**
- * Wait for any current child process to die and return information
- * about that child.
- * @param proc Pointer to NULL on entry, will be filled out with child's
- * information
- * @param exitcode The returned exit status of the child, if a child process
- * dies, or the signal that caused the child to die.
- * On platforms that don't support obtaining this information,
- * the status parameter will be returned as APR_ENOTIMPL.
- * @param exitwhy Why the child died, the bitwise or of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_PROC_EXIT -- process terminated normally
- * APR_PROC_SIGNAL -- process was killed by a signal
- * APR_PROC_SIGNAL_CORE -- process was killed by a signal, and
- * generated a core dump.
- * </PRE>
- * @param waithow How should we wait. One of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_WAIT -- block until the child process dies.
- * APR_NOWAIT -- return immediately regardless of if the
- * child is dead or not.
- * </PRE>
- * @param p Pool to allocate child information out of.
- * @bug Passing proc as a *proc rather than **proc was an odd choice
- * for some platforms... this should be revisited in 1.0
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_wait_all_procs(apr_proc_t *proc,
- int *exitcode,
- apr_exit_why_e *exitwhy,
- apr_wait_how_e waithow,
- apr_pool_t *p);
- #define APR_PROC_DETACH_FOREGROUND 0 /**< Do not detach */
- #define APR_PROC_DETACH_DAEMONIZE 1 /**< Detach */
- /**
- * Detach the process from the controlling terminal.
- * @param daemonize set to non-zero if the process should daemonize
- * and become a background process, else it will
- * stay in the foreground.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_detach(int daemonize);
- /**
- * Register an other_child -- a child associated to its registered
- * maintence callback. This callback is invoked when the process
- * dies, is disconnected or disappears.
- * @param proc The child process to register.
- * @param maintenance maintenance is a function that is invoked with a
- * reason and the data pointer passed here.
- * @param data Opaque context data passed to the maintenance function.
- * @param write_fd An fd that is probed for writing. If it is ever unwritable
- * then the maintenance is invoked with reason
- * OC_REASON_UNWRITABLE.
- * @param p The pool to use for allocating memory.
- * @bug write_fd duplicates the proc->out stream, it's really redundant
- * and should be replaced in the APR 1.0 API with a bitflag of which
- * proc->in/out/err handles should be health checked.
- * @bug no platform currently tests the pipes health.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_proc_other_child_register(apr_proc_t *proc,
- void (*maintenance) (int reason,
- void *,
- int status),
- void *data, apr_file_t *write_fd,
- apr_pool_t *p);
- /**
- * Stop watching the specified other child.
- * @param data The data to pass to the maintenance function. This is
- * used to find the process to unregister.
- * @warning Since this can be called by a maintenance function while we're
- * scanning the other_children list, all scanners should protect
- * themself by loading ocr->next before calling any maintenance
- * function.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_proc_other_child_unregister(void *data);
- /**
- * Notify the maintenance callback of a registered other child process
- * that application has detected an event, such as death.
- * @param proc The process to check
- * @param reason The reason code to pass to the maintenance function
- * @param status The status to pass to the maintenance function
- * @remark An example of code using this behavior;
- * <pre>
- * rv = apr_proc_wait_all_procs(&proc, &exitcode, &status, APR_WAIT, p);
- * if (APR_STATUS_IS_CHILD_DONE(rv)) {
- * \#if APR_HAS_OTHER_CHILD
- * if (apr_proc_other_child_alert(&proc, APR_OC_REASON_DEATH, status)
- * == APR_SUCCESS) {
- * ; (already handled)
- * }
- * else
- * \#endif
- * [... handling non-otherchild processes death ...]
- * </pre>
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_other_child_alert(apr_proc_t *proc,
- int reason,
- int status);
- /**
- * Test one specific other child processes and invoke the maintenance callback
- * with the appropriate reason code, if still running, or the appropriate reason
- * code if the process is no longer healthy.
- * @param ocr The registered other child
- * @param reason The reason code (e.g. APR_OC_REASON_RESTART) if still running
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_proc_other_child_refresh(apr_other_child_rec_t *ocr,
- int reason);
- /**
- * Test all registered other child processes and invoke the maintenance callback
- * with the appropriate reason code, if still running, or the appropriate reason
- * code if the process is no longer healthy.
- * @param reason The reason code (e.g. APR_OC_REASON_RESTART) to running processes
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_proc_other_child_refresh_all(int reason);
- /**
- * Terminate a process.
- * @param proc The process to terminate.
- * @param sig How to kill the process.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_proc_kill(apr_proc_t *proc, int sig);
- /**
- * Register a process to be killed when a pool dies.
- * @param a The pool to use to define the processes lifetime
- * @param proc The process to register
- * @param how How to kill the process, one of:
- * <PRE>
- * APR_KILL_NEVER -- process is never sent any signals
- * APR_KILL_ALWAYS -- process is sent SIGKILL on apr_pool_t cleanup
- * APR_KILL_AFTER_TIMEOUT -- SIGTERM, wait 3 seconds, SIGKILL
- * APR_JUST_WAIT -- wait forever for the process to complete
- * APR_KILL_ONLY_ONCE -- send SIGTERM and then wait
- * </PRE>
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_note_subprocess(apr_pool_t *a, apr_proc_t *proc,
- apr_kill_conditions_e how);
- #if APR_HAS_THREADS
- #if (APR_HAVE_SIGWAIT || APR_HAVE_SIGSUSPEND) && !defined(OS2)
- /**
- * Setup the process for a single thread to be used for all signal handling.
- * @warning This must be called before any threads are created
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_setup_signal_thread(void);
- /**
- * Make the current thread listen for signals. This thread will loop
- * forever, calling a provided function whenever it receives a signal. That
- * functions should return 1 if the signal has been handled, 0 otherwise.
- * @param signal_handler The function to call when a signal is received
- * apr_status_t apr_signal_thread((int)(*signal_handler)(int signum))
- * @note Synchronous signals like SIGABRT/SIGSEGV/SIGBUS/... are ignored by
- * apr_signal_thread() and thus can't be waited by this function (they remain
- * handled by the operating system or its native signals interface).
- * @remark In APR version 1.6 and ealier, SIGUSR2 was part of these ignored
- * signals and thus was never passed in to the signal_handler. From APR 1.7
- * this is no more the case so SIGUSR2 can be handled in signal_handler and
- * acted upon like the other asynchronous signals.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_signal_thread(int(*signal_handler)(int signum));
- #endif /* (APR_HAVE_SIGWAIT || APR_HAVE_SIGSUSPEND) && !defined(OS2) */
- /**
- * Get the child-pool used by the thread from the thread info.
- * @return apr_pool_t the pool
- */
- APR_POOL_DECLARE_ACCESSOR(thread);
- #endif /* APR_HAS_THREADS */
- /** @} */
- #ifdef __cplusplus
- }
- #endif
- #endif /* ! APR_THREAD_PROC_H */
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