EXEC(2) | System Calls | EXEC(2) |
exec
, execl
,
execle
, execlp
,
execv
, execve
,
execvp
, execvpe
,
fexecve
— execute a
file
#include
<unistd.h>
int
execl
(const char *path,
const char *arg0, ...,
NULL);
int
execv
(const char *path,
char *const argv[]);
int
execle
(const char *path,
const char *arg0, ...,
NULL, char *const envp[]);
int
execve
(const char *path,
char *const argv[], char *const
envp[]);
int
execlp
(const char *file,
const char *arg0, ...,
NULL);
int
execvp
(const char *file,
char *const argv[]);
int
execvpe
(const char *file,
char *const argv[], char *const
envp[]);
int
fexecve
(int fd,
char *const argv[], char *const
envp[]);
Each of the functions in the exec
family
replaces the current process image with a new process image. The new image
is constructed from a regular, executable file called the new process image
file. This file is either an executable object file or a file of data for an
interpreter. There is no return from a successful call to one of these
functions because the calling process image is overlaid by the new process
image.
An interpreter file begins with a line of the form
#! pathname
[arg]
where pathname is the path of the interpreter, and arg is an optional argument. When an interpreter file is executed, the system invokes the specified interpreter. The pathname specified in the interpreter file is passed as arg0 to the interpreter. If arg was specified in the interpreter file, it is passed as arg1 to the interpreter. The remaining arguments to the interpreter are arg0 through argn of the originally exec'd file. The interpreter named by pathname may also be an interpreter file. There can be up to four nested interpreter files before the final interpreter. The setid bits on nested interpreters are silently ignored.
When a C-language program is executed as a result of this call, it is entered as a C-language function call as follows:
int main(int
argc, char
*argv[]);
where argc is the argument count and argv is an array of character pointers to the arguments themselves. In addition, the following variable:
extern char
**environ;
is initialized as a pointer to an array of character pointers to the environment strings. The argv and environ arrays are each terminated by a null pointer. The null pointer terminating the argv array is not counted in argc.
The value of argc is non-negative, and if greater than 0, argv[0] points to a string containing the name of the file. If argc is 0, argv[0] is a null pointer, in which case there are no arguments. Applications should verify that argc is greater than 0 or that argv[0] is not a null pointer before dereferencing argv[0].
The arguments specified by a program with one of the
exec
functions are passed on to the new process
image in the
main
()
arguments.
The path argument points to a path name that identifies the new process image file.
The file argument is used to
construct a pathname that identifies the new process image file. If the
file argument contains a slash character, it is used
as the pathname for this file. Otherwise, the path prefix for this file is
obtained by a search of the directories passed in the
PATH
environment variable (see
environ(7)). The environment is
supplied typically by the shell. If the process image file is not a valid
executable object file,
execlp
(),
execvp
(),
and
execvpe
()
use the contents of that file as standard input to the shell. In this case,
the shell becomes the new process image. The standard to which the caller
conforms determines which shell is used. See
standards(7).
The
fexecve
()
function is equivalent to
execve
(),
except that instead of using a named file, the file referenced by the file
descriptor fd is used. Note that this file descriptor
must reference a regular file which has typically been opened with
O_EXEC
. defined in
<fcntl.h>
. The image is
loaded from offset zero of the file, regardless of the offset of fd.
The arguments represented by
arg0... are pointers to
null-terminated character strings. These strings constitute the argument
list available to the new process image. The list is terminated by a null
pointer. The arg0 argument should point to a filename
that is associated with the process being started by one of the
exec
functions.
The argv argument is an array of character
pointers to null-terminated strings. The last member of this array must be a
null pointer. These strings constitute the argument list available to the
new process image. The value in argv[0] should point
to a filename that is associated with the process being started by one of
the exec
functions.
The envp argument is an array of
character pointers to null-terminated strings. These strings constitute the
environment for the new process image. The envp array
is terminated by a null pointer. For
execl
(),
execv
(),
execvp
(), and execlp
(), the
C-language run-time start-off routine places a pointer to the environment of
the calling process in the global object extern char
**environ, and it is used to pass the environment of the calling
process to the new process image.
The number of bytes available for the new process's combined
argument and environment lists is ARG_MAX
. It is
implementation-dependent whether null terminators, pointers, and/or any
alignment bytes are included in this total.
File descriptors open in the calling process image remain open in
the new process image, except for those whose close-on-exec flag
FD_CLOEXEC
is set; see
fcntl(2). For those file descriptors
that remain open, all attributes of the open file description, including
file locks and the disposition of the close-on-fork flag
FD_CLOFORK
, remain unchanged.
The preferred hardware address translation size (see memcntl(2)) for the stack and heap of the new process image are set to the default system page size.
Directory streams open in the calling process image are closed in the new process image.
The state of conversion descriptors and message catalogue descriptors in the new process image is undefined. For the new process, the equivalent of:
setlocale(LC_ALL,
"C");
is executed at startup.
Signals set to the default action
(SIG_DFL
) in the calling process image are set to
the default action in the new process image (see
signal(3C)). Signals set to be
ignored (SIG_IGN
) by the calling process image are
set to be ignored by the new process image. Signals set to be caught by the
calling process image are set to the default action in the new process image
(see signal.h(3HEAD)). After a
successful call to any of the exec
functions,
alternate signal stacks are not preserved and the
SA_ONSTACK
flag is cleared for all signals.
After a successful call to any of the exec
functions, any functions previously registered by
atexit(3C) are no longer
registered.
The saved resource limits in the new process image are set to be a copy of the process's corresponding hard and soft resource limits.
If the ST_NOSUID
bit is set for the file
system containing the new process image file, then the effective user ID and
effective group ID are unchanged in the new process image. If the
set-user-ID mode bit of the new process image file is set (see
chmod(2)), the effective user ID of the
new process image is set to the owner ID of the new process image file.
Similarly, if the set-group-ID mode bit of the new process image file is
set, the effective group ID of the new process image is set to the group ID
of the new process image file. The real user ID and real group ID of the new
process image remain the same as those of the calling process image. The
effective user ID and effective group ID of the new process image are saved
(as the saved set-user-ID and the saved set-group-ID) for use by
setuid(2).
The privilege sets are changed according to the following rules:
The system attempts to set the privilege-aware state to non-PA both before performing any modifications to the process IDs and privilege sets as well as after completing the transition to new UIDs and privilege sets, following the rules outlined in privileges(7).
If the {PRIV_PROC_OWNER
} privilege is
asserted in the effective set, the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits will be
honored when the process is being controlled by
ptrace(3C). Additional restrictions
can apply when the traced process has an effective UID of 0. See
privileges(7).
Any shared memory segments attached to the calling
process image will not be attached to the new process image (see
shmop(2)). Any mappings established
through mmap
()
are not preserved across an exec
. Memory mappings
created in the process are unmapped before the address space is rebuilt for
the new process image. See mmap(2).
Memory locks established by the calling process via calls to
mlockall(3C) or
mlock(3C) are removed. If locked pages
in the address space of the calling process are also mapped into the address
spaces the locks established by the other processes will be unaffected by
the call by this process to the exec
function. If
the exec
function fails, the effect on memory locks
is unspecified.
If _XOPEN_REALTIME
is defined and has a
value other than -1, any named semaphores open in the calling process are
closed as if by appropriate calls to
sem_close(3C).
Profiling is disabled for the new process; see profil(2).
Timers created by the calling process with timer_create(3C) are deleted before replacing the current process image with the new process image.
For the SCHED_FIFO
and
SCHED_RR
scheduling policies, the policy and
priority settings are not changed by a call to an
exec
function.
All open message queue descriptors in the calling process are closed, as described in mq_close(3C).
Any outstanding asynchronous I/O operations may be cancelled.
Those asynchronous I/O operations that are not canceled will complete as if
the exec
function had not yet occurred, but any
associated signal notifications are suppressed. It is unspecified whether
the exec
function itself blocks awaiting such I/O
completion. In no event, however, will the new process image created by the
exec
function be affected by the presence of
outstanding asynchronous I/O operations at the time the
exec
function is called.
All active contract templates are cleared (see contract(5)).
The new process also inherits the following attributes from the calling process:
A call to any exec
function from a process
with more than one thread results in all threads being terminated and the
new executable image being loaded and executed. No destructor functions will
be called.
Upon successful completion, each of the functions in the
exec
family marks for update the
st_atime field of the file. If an
exec
function failed but was able to locate the
process image file, whether the st_atime field is
marked for update is unspecified. Should the function succeed, the process
image file is considered to have been opened with
open(2). The corresponding
close(2) is considered to occur at a
time after this open, but before process termination or successful
completion of a subsequent call to one of the exec
functions. The argv[] and envp[]
arrays of pointers and the strings to which those arrays point will not be
modified by a call to one of the exec
functions,
except as a consequence of replacing the process image.
The saved resource limits in the new process image are set to be a copy of the process's corresponding hard and soft limits.
If a function in the exec
family returns
to the calling process image, an error has occurred; the return value is -1
and errno is set to indicate the error.
The exec
functions will fail if:
E2BIG
ARG_MAX
bytes. The
argument list limit is sum of the size of the argument list plus the size
of the environment's exported shell variables.EACCES
The new process file is not an ordinary file.
The new process file mode denies execute permission.
The {FILE_DAC_SEARCH
} privilege
overrides the restriction on directory searches.
The {FILE_DAC_EXECUTE
} privilege
overrides the lack of execute permission.
EAGAIN
EFAULT
EINVAL
EINTR
exec
family.The exec
functions except for
fexecve
() will fail if:
ELOOP
ENAMETOOLONG
PATH_MAX
, or the length of a
file or path component exceeds
NAME_MAX
while
_POSIX_NO_TRUNC
is in effect.ENOENT
ENOLINK
ENOTDIR
The exec
functions, except for
execlp
(), execvp
(), and
execvpe
(), will fail if:
ENOEXEC
The fexecve
() function will fail if:
EBADF
ENOMEM
The exec
functions except for
fexecve
() may fail if:
ENAMETOOLONG
PATH_MAX
.The exec
functions may fail if:
As the state of conversion descriptors and message catalogue
descriptors in the new process image is undefined, portable applications
should not rely on their use and should close them prior to calling one of
the exec
functions.
Applications that require other than the default POSIX locale should call setlocale(3C) with the appropriate parameters to establish the locale of the new process.
The environ array should not be accessed directly by the application.
The
execle
(),
execve
()
and fexecve
() functions are
Async-Signal-Safe
ksh(1), ps(1), sh(1), alarm(2), brk(2), chmod(2), close(2), exit(2), fcntl(2), fork(2), getpflags(2), getrlimit(2), memcntl(2), mmap(2), nice(2), open(2), priocntl(2), processor_bind(2), profil(2), pset_bind(2), semop(2), setuid(2), shmop(2), sigpending(2), sigprocmask(2), times(2), ulimit(2), umask(2), atexit(3C), lockf(3C), mlock(3C), mlockall(3C), mq_close(3C), ptrace(3C), sem_close(3C), setlocale(3C), signal(3C), system(3C), timer_create(3C), signal.h(3HEAD), a.out(5), contract(5), process(5), attributes(7), environ(7), privileges(7), standards(7)
If a program is setuid to a user ID other than the superuser, and the program is executed when the real user ID is super-user, then the program has some of the powers of a super-user as well.
June 21, 2024 | OmniOS |