PIDFILE(3)

NAME

pidfile_open, pidfile_write, pidfile_close, pidfile_remove -- library for PID files handling

LIBRARY

Utility functions from BSD systems (libbsd, -lbsd)

SYNOPSIS

#include <libutil.h>

struct pidfh *
pidfile_open(const char *path, mode_t mode, pid_t *pidptr);

int
pidfile_write(struct pidfh *pfh);

int
pidfile_close(struct pidfh *pfh);

int
pidfile_remove(struct pidfh *pfh);

DESCRIPTION

The pidfile family of functions allows daemons to handle PID files. It uses flopen(3) to lock a pidfile and detect already running daemons.

The pidfile_open() function opens (or creates) a file specified by the path argument and locks it. If a file can not be locked, a PID of an already running daemon is returned in the pidptr argument (if it is not NULL). The function does not write process' PID into the file here, so
it can be used before fork()ing and exit with a proper error message when needed. If the path argument is NULL, /var/run/<progname>.pid file will be used.

The pidfile_write() function writes process' PID into a previously opened file.

The pidfile_close() function closes a pidfile. It should be used after daemon fork()s to start a child process.

The pidfile_remove() function closes and removes a pidfile.

RETURN VALUES

The pidfile_open() function returns a valid pointer to a pidfh structure on success, or NULL if an error occurs. If an error occurs, errno will be set.

The pidfile_write(), pidfile_close(), and pidfile_remove() functions return the value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error.

EXAMPLES

The following example shows in which order these functions should be
used. Note that it is safe to pass NULL to pidfile_write(), pidfile_remove() and pidfile_close() functions.

struct pidfh *pfh;
pid_t otherpid, childpid;

pfh = pidfile_open("/var/run/daemon.pid", 0600, &otherpid);
if (pfh == NULL) {
if (errno == EEXIST) {
errx(EXIT_FAILURE, "Daemon already running, pid: %jd.",
(intmax_t)otherpid);
}
/* If we cannot create pidfile from other reasons, only warn. */ warn("Cannot open or create pidfile");
}
if (daemon(0, 0) == -1) {
warn("Cannot daemonize");
pidfile_remove(pfh);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
pidfile_write(pfh);
for (;;) {
/* Do work. */
childpid = fork();
switch (childpid) {
case -1:
syslog(LOG_ERR, "Cannot fork(): %s.", strerror(errno));
break;
case 0:
pidfile_close(pfh);
/* Do child work. */
break;
default:
syslog(LOG_INFO, "Child %jd started.", (intmax_t)childpid);
break;
}
}
pidfile_remove(pfh);
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);

ERRORS

The pidfile_open() function will fail if:

[EEXIST] Some process already holds the lock on the given pid
file, meaning that a daemon is already running.
[ENAMETOOLONG] Specified pidfile's name is too long.
[EINVAL] Some process already holds the lock on the given pid
file, but PID read from there is invalid.
[EAGAIN] Some process already holds the lock on the given pid
file, but the file is truncated. Most likely, the
existing daemon is writing new PID into the file.
The pidfile_open() function may also fail and set errno for any errors specified for the fstat(2), open(2), and read(2) calls.
The pidfile_write() function will fail if:
[EINVAL] Improper function use. Probably called before
pidfile_open().
The pidfile_write() function may also fail and set errno for any errors specified for the fstat(2), ftruncate(2), and write(2) calls.
The pidfile_close() function may fail and set errno for any errors specified for the close(2) and fstat(2) calls.
The pidfile_remove() function will fail if:
[EINVAL] Improper function use. Probably called not from the
process which made pidfile_write().
The pidfile_remove() function may also fail and set errno for any errors specified for the close(2), fstat(2), write(2), and unlink(2) system
calls and the flopen(3) library function.

SEE ALSO

open(2), daemon(3), flopen(3)

AUTHORS

The pidfile functionality is based on ideas from John-Mark Gurney <jmg@FreeBSD.org>.

The code and manual page was written by Pawel Jakub Dawidek
<pjd@FreeBSD.org>.
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