(* | Argument list too long | *) | |
(* | Permission denied | *) | |
(* | Resource temporarily unavailable; try again | *) | |
(* | Bad file descriptor | *) | |
(* | Resource unavailable | *) | |
(* | No child process | *) | |
(* | Resource deadlock would occur | *) | |
(* | Domain error for math functions, etc. | *) | |
(* | File exists | *) | |
(* | Bad address | *) | |
(* | File too large | *) | |
(* | Function interrupted by signal | *) | |
(* | Invalid argument | *) | |
(* | Hardware I/O error | *) | |
(* | Is a directory | *) | |
(* | Too many open files by the process | *) | |
(* | Too many links | *) | |
(* | Filename too long | *) | |
(* | Too many open files in the system | *) | |
(* | No such device | *) | |
(* | No such file or directory | *) | |
(* | Not an executable file | *) | |
(* | No locks available | *) | |
(* | Not enough memory | *) | |
(* | No space left on device | *) | |
(* | Function not supported | *) | |
(* | Not a directory | *) | |
(* | Directory not empty | *) | |
(* | Inappropriate I/O control operation | *) | |
(* | No such device or address | *) | |
(* | Operation not permitted | *) | |
(* | Broken pipe | *) | |
(* | Result too large | *) | |
(* | Read-only file system | *) | |
(* | Invalid seek e.g. on a pipe | *) | |
(* | No such process | *) | |
(* | Invalid link | *) | |
(* | Operation would block | *) | |
(* | Operation now in progress | *) | |
(* | Operation already in progress | *) | |
(* | Socket operation on non-socket | *) | |
(* | Destination address required | *) | |
(* | Message too long | *) | |
(* | Protocol wrong type for socket | *) | |
(* | Protocol not available | *) | |
(* | Protocol not supported | *) | |
(* | Socket type not supported | *) | |
(* | Operation not supported on socket | *) | |
(* | Protocol family not supported | *) | |
(* | Address family not supported by protocol family | *) | |
(* | Address already in use | *) | |
(* | Can't assign requested address | *) | |
(* | Network is down | *) | |
(* | Network is unreachable | *) | |
(* | Network dropped connection on reset | *) | |
(* | Software caused connection abort | *) | |
(* | Connection reset by peer | *) | |
(* | No buffer space available | *) | |
(* | Socket is already connected | *) | |
(* | Socket is not connected | *) | |
(* | Can't send after socket shutdown | *) | |
(* | Too many references: can't splice | *) | |
(* | Connection timed out | *) | |
(* | Connection refused | *) | |
(* | Host is down | *) | |
(* | No route to host | *) | |
(* | Too many levels of symbolic links | *) | |
(* | File size or position not representable | *) | |
(* | Unknown error | *) |
The type of error codes.
Errors defined in the POSIX standard
and additional errors, mostly BSD.
All other errors are mapped to EUNKNOWNERR
.
Raised by the system calls below when an error is encountered. The first component is the error code; the second component is the function name; the third component is the string parameter to the function, if it has one, or the empty string otherwise.
Return a string describing the given error code.
handle_unix_error f
runs f ()
and returns the result. If the exception
Unix_error
is raised, it prints a message describing the error and exits with code
2.
retry_until_no_eintr f
returns f ()
unless f ()
fails with EINTR
; in which
case f ()
is run again until it raises a different error or returns a value.
If you're looking for getenv
, that's in the Sys module.
Return the process environment, as an array of strings with the format ``variable=value''.
Unix.putenv ~key ~data
sets the value associated to a
variable in the process environment.
key
is the name of the environment variable,
and data
its new associated value.
unsetenv name
deletes the variable name
from the environment.
EINVAL name
contained an ’=’ or an '\000' character.
env
is used to control the environment of a child process, and can take three forms.
`Replace_raw
replaces the entire environment with strings in the Unix style, like
"VARIABLE_NAME=value"
. `Replace
has the same effect as `Replace_raw
, but using
bindings represented as "VARIABLE_NAME", "value"
. `Extend
adds entries to the
existing environment rather than replacing the whole environment.
If env
contains multiple bindings for the same variable, the last takes precedence.
In the case of `Extend
, bindings in env
take precedence over the existing
environment.
exec ~prog ~args ?search_path ?env
execs prog
with args
. If use_path = true
(the default) and prog
doesn't contain a slash, then exec
searches the PATH
environment variable for prog
. If env
is supplied, it determines the environment
when prog
is executed.
The first element in args should be the program itself; the correct way to call exec
is:
exec ~prog ~args:[ prog; arg1; arg2; ...] ()
fork_exec ~prog ~args ?use_path ?env ()
forks and execs prog
with args
in the
child process, returning the child PID to the parent.
fork ()
forks a new process. The return value indicates whether we are continuing
in the child or the parent, and if the parent, includes the child's process id.
wait{,_nohang,_untraced,_nohang_untraced} ?restart wait_on
is a family of functions
that wait on a process to exit (normally or via a signal) or be stopped by a signal
(if untraced
is used). The wait_on
argument specifies which processes to wait on.
The nohang
variants return None
immediately if no such process exists. If
nohang
is not used, waitpid
will block until one of the desired processes exits.
The non-nohang variants have a restart
flag with (default true) that causes the
system call to be retried upon EAGAIN|EINTR. The nohang variants do not have this
flag because they don't block.
waitpid pid
waits for child process pid
to terminate, and returns its exit status.
waitpid_exn
is like waitpid
, except it only returns if the child exits with status
zero, and raises if the child terminates in any other way.
Execute the given command, wait until it terminates, and return
its termination status. The string is interpreted by the shell
/bin/sh
and therefore can contain redirections, quotes, variables,
etc. The result WEXITED 127
indicates that the shell couldn't
be executed.
Return the pid of the process.
Return the pid of the parent process.
Return the pid of the parent process, if you're really sure you're never going to be the init process.
Change the process priority. The integer argument is added to the ``nice'' value. (Higher values of the ``nice'' value mean lower priorities.) Return the new nice value.
The abstract type of file descriptors.
File descriptor for standard input.
File descriptor for standard output.
File descriptor for standard standard error.
The flags to UnixLabels.openfile.
(* | Open for reading | *) | |
(* | Open for writing | *) | |
(* | Open for reading and writing | *) | |
(* | Open in non-blocking mode | *) | |
(* | Open for append | *) | |
(* | Create if nonexistent | *) | |
(* | Truncate to 0 length if existing | *) | |
(* | Fail if existing | *) | |
(* | Don't make this dev a controlling tty | *) | |
(* | Writes complete as `Synchronised I/O data integrity completion' | *) | |
(* | Writes complete as `Synchronised I/O file integrity completion' | *) | |
(* | Reads complete as writes (depending on O_SYNC/O_DSYNC) | *) | |
(* | Windows only: allow the file to be deleted while still open | *) | |
(* | Set the close-on-exec flag on the descriptor returned by openfile | *) |
Open the named file with the given flags. Third argument is the permissions to give to the file if it is created. Return a file descriptor on the named file. Default permissions 0o644.
fcntl_getfl fd
gets the current flags for fd
from the open-file-descriptor table
via the system call fcntl(fd, F_GETFL)
. See "man fcntl".
fcntl_setfl fd flags
sets the flags for fd
in the open-file-descriptor table via
the system call fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, flags)
. See "man fcntl". As per the Linux man
page, on Linux this only allows append
and nonblock
to be set.
Close a file descriptor.
with_file file ~mode ~perm ~f
opens file
, and applies f
to the resulting file
descriptor. When f
finishes (or raises), with_file
closes the descriptor and
returns the result of f
(or raises).
read fd buff ofs len
reads len
characters from descriptor
fd
, storing them in string buff
, starting at position ofs
in string buff
. Return the number of characters actually read.
write fd buff ofs len
writes len
characters to descriptor
fd
, taking them from string buff
, starting at position ofs
in string buff
. Return the number of characters actually
written.
When an error is reported some characters might have already been
written. Use single_write
instead to ensure that this is not the
case.
WARNING: write is an interruptible call and has no way to handle EINTR properly. You should most probably be using single write.
Same as write
but ensures that all errors are reported and
that no character has ever been written when an error is reported.
Create an input channel reading from the given descriptor.
The channel is initially in binary mode; use
set_binary_mode_in ic false
if text mode is desired.
Create an output channel writing on the given descriptor.
The channel is initially in binary mode; use
set_binary_mode_out oc false
if text mode is desired.
Truncates the file corresponding to the given descriptor to the given size.
: int | ; | (* | Device number | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Inode number | *) | |
: file_kind | ; | (* | Kind of the file | *) | |
: file_perm | ; | (* | Access rights | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Number of links | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | User id of the owner | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Group ID of the file's group | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Device minor number | *) | |
: int64 | ; | (* | Size in bytes | *) | |
: float | ; | (* | Last access time | *) | |
: float | ; | (* | Last modification time | *) | |
: float | ; | (* | Last status change time | *) |
The informations returned by the UnixLabels.stat calls.
Return the information for the named file.
Same as UnixLabels.stat, but in case the file is a symbolic link, return the information for the link itself.
(* | Unlock a region | *) | |
(* | Lock a region for writing, and block if already locked | *) | |
(* | Lock a region for writing, or fail if already locked | *) | |
(* | Test a region for other process locks | *) | |
(* | Lock a region for reading, and block if already locked | *) | |
(* | Lock a region for reading, or fail if already locked | *) |
Commands for lockf.
lockf fd cmd size
place a lock on a file_descr that prevents any other process from
* calling lockf successfully on the same file. Due to a limitation in the current
* implementation the length will be converted to a native int, potentially throwing an
* exception if it is too large.
Return true
if the given file descriptor refers to a terminal or
console window, false
otherwise.
rename old new
changes the name of a file from old
to new
.
link ?force ~target ~link_name ()
creates a hard link named link_name
to the file named target
. If force
is true, an existing entry in
place of link_name
will be unlinked. This unlinking may raise a Unix
error, e.g. if the entry is a directory.
Change the permissions of the named file.
Change the owner uid and owner gid of the named file.
Change the owner uid and owner gid of an opened file.
Check that the process has the given permissions over the named file.
Set the ``non-blocking'' flag on the given descriptor.
When the non-blocking flag is set, reading on a descriptor
on which there is temporarily no data available raises the
EAGAIN
or EWOULDBLOCK
error instead of blocking;
writing on a descriptor on which there is temporarily no room
for writing also raises EAGAIN
or EWOULDBLOCK
.
Clear the ``non-blocking'' flag on the given descriptor. See UnixLabels.set_nonblock.
Set the ``close-on-exec'' flag on the given descriptor.
A descriptor with the close-on-exec flag is automatically
closed when the current process starts another program with
one of the exec
functions.
Clear the ``close-on-exec'' flag on the given descriptor. See UnixLabels.set_close_on_exec.
Create a directory. The permissions of the created directory are (perm & ~umask & 0777). The default perm is 0777.
Create a directory recursively. The permissions of the created directory are
those granted by mkdir ~perm
.
Open a descriptor on a directory
Return the next entry in a directory.
Reposition the descriptor to the beginning of the directory
Close a directory descriptor.
Create a pipe. The first component of the result is opened for reading, that's the exit to the pipe. The second component is opened for writing, that's the entrance to the pipe.
Create a named pipe with the given permissions.
Low-level process
create_process ~prog ~args
forks a new process that executes the program prog
with
arguments args
. The function returns the pid of the process along with file
descriptors attached to stdin, stdout, and stderr of the new process. The executable
file prog
is searched for in the path. The new process has the same environment as
the current process. Unlike in execve
the program name is automatically passed as
the first argument.
create_process_env ~prog ~args ~env
as create_process
, but takes an additional
parameter that extends or replaces the current environment. No effort is made to
ensure that the keys passed in as env are unique, so if an environment variable is set
twice the second version will override the first.
High-level pipe and process management. These functions
(with UnixLabels.open_process_out and UnixLabels.open_process)
run the given command in parallel with the program,
and return channels connected to the standard input and/or
the standard output of the command. The command is interpreted
by the shell /bin/sh
(cf. system
). Warning: writes on channels
are buffered, hence be careful to call Pervasives.flush at the right times
to ensure correct synchronization.
See UnixLabels.open_process_in.
Close channels opened by UnixLabels.open_process_in, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
Close channels opened by UnixLabels.open_process_out, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
Close channels opened by UnixLabels.open_process, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
Close channels opened by UnixLabels.open_process_full, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
symlink source dest
creates the file dest
as a symbolic link
to the file source
.
Wait until some input/output operations become possible on some channels. The three
list arguments are a set of descriptors to check for reading, for writing, or for
exceptional conditions. ~timeout
is the maximal timeout. The result is composed of
three sets of descriptors: those ready for reading, ready for writing, and over which
an exceptional condition is pending.
Setting restart to true means that we want select
to restart automatically on EINTR
(instead of propagating the exception)...
: float | ; | (* | User time for the process | *) | |
: float | ; | (* | System time for the process | *) | |
: float | ; | (* | User time for the children processes | *) | |
: float | ; | (* | System time for the children processes | *) |
The execution times (CPU times) of a process.
: int | ; | (* | Seconds 0..59 | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Minutes 0..59 | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Hours 0..23 | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Day of month 1..31 | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Month of year 0..11 | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Year - 1900 | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Day of week (Sunday is 0) | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Day of year 0..365 | *) | |
: bool | ; | (* | Daylight time savings in effect | *) |
The type representing wallclock time and calendar date.
Same as time above, but with resolution better than 1 second.
Convert a time in seconds, as returned by UnixLabels.time, into a date and a time. Assumes UTC.
Convert a UTC time in a tm record to a time in seconds
Convert a time in seconds, as returned by UnixLabels.time, into a date and a time. Assumes the local time zone.
Convert a date and time, specified by the tm
argument, into
a time in seconds, as returned by UnixLabels.time. Also return a normalized
copy of the given tm
record, with the tm_wday
, tm_yday
,
and tm_isdst
fields recomputed from the other fields.
The tm
argument is interpreted in the local time zone.
Convert a date and time, specified by the tm
argument, into a formatted string.
See 'man strftime' for format options.
Given a format string, convert a corresponding string to a date and time See 'man strptime' for format options.
nanosleep f
delays execution of the program for at least f
seconds. The function
can return earlier if a signal has been delivered, in which case the number of seconds
left is returned. Any other failure raises an exception.
Return the execution times of the process.
Set the last access time (second arg) and last modification time (third arg) for a file. Times are expressed in seconds from 00:00:00 GMT, Jan. 1, 1970.
(* |
decrements in real time, and sends the signal SIGALRM when expired.
|
*) | |
(* |
decrements in process virtual time, and sends SIGVTALRM when expired.
|
*) | |
(* |
(for profiling) decrements both when the process
is running and when the system is running on behalf of the
process; it sends SIGPROF when expired.
|
*) |
The three kinds of interval timers.
setitimer t s
sets the interval timer t
and returns
its previous status. The s
argument is interpreted as follows:
s.it_value
, if nonzero, is the time to the next timer expiration;
s.it_interval
, if nonzero, specifies a value to
be used in reloading it_value when the timer expires.
Setting s.it_value
to zero disable the timer.
Setting s.it_interval
to zero causes the timer to be disabled
after its next expiration.
It's highly recommended to read the straight unix docs on these functions for more color. You can get that info from man pages or http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/functions/setuid.html
Sets the real user id and effective user id for the process. Only use this when superuser. To setuid as an ordinary user, see Core_extended.Unix.seteuid.
passwd
database
groups
database.
The type of socket addresses. ADDR_UNIX name
is a socket address in the Unix domain;
name
is a file name in the file system. ADDR_INET(addr,port)
is a socket address
in the Internet domain; addr
is the Internet address of the machine, and port
is
the port number.
sockaddr_blocking_sexp
is like sockaddr
, with of_sexp
that performs DNS lookup
to resolve Inet_addr.t
.
Create a new socket in the given domain, and with the given kind. The third argument is the protocol type; 0 selects the default protocol for that kind of sockets.
Create a pair of unnamed sockets, connected together.
Accept connections on the given socket. The returned descriptor is a socket connected to the client; the returned address is the address of the connecting client.
Set up a socket for receiving connection requests. The integer argument is the number
of pending requests that will be established and queued for accept. Depending on
operating system, version, and configuration, subsequent connections may be refused
actively (as with RST
), ignored, or effectively established and queued anyway.
Because handling of excess connections varies, it is most robust for applications to
accept and close excess connections if they can. To be sure the client receives an
RST
rather than an orderly shutdown, you can setsockopt_optint file_descr SO_LINGER
(Some 0)
before closing.
In Linux, for example, the system configuration parameters tcp_max_syn_backlog
,
tcp_abort_on_overflow
, and syncookies
can all affect connection queuing
behavior.
Shutdown a socket connection. SHUTDOWN_SEND
as second argument
causes reads on the other end of the connection to return
an end-of-file condition.
SHUTDOWN_RECEIVE
causes writes on the other end of the connection
to return a closed pipe condition (SIGPIPE
signal).
Receive data from an unconnected socket.
Send data over an unconnected socket.
(* | Record debugging information | *) | |
(* | Permit sending of broadcast messages | *) | |
(* | Allow reuse of local addresses for bind | *) | |
(* | Keep connection active | *) | |
(* | Bypass the standard routing algorithms | *) | |
(* | Leave out-of-band data in line | *) | |
(* | Control the Nagle algorithm for TCP sockets | *) | |
(* | Forbid binding an IPv6 socket to an IPv4 address | *) |
The socket options that can be consulted with UnixLabels.getsockopt
and modified with UnixLabels.setsockopt. These options have a boolean
(true
/false
) value.
(* | Size of send buffer | *) | |
(* | Size of received buffer | *) | |
(* | Report the error status and clear it | *) | |
(* | Report the socket type | *) | |
(* | Minimum number of bytes to process for input operations | *) | |
The socket options that can be consulted with UnixLabels.getsockopt_int and modified with UnixLabels.setsockopt_int. These options have an integer value.
(* | Whether to linger on closed connections with sexp that have data present, and for how long (in seconds) | *) |
The socket options that can be consulted with UnixLabels.getsockopt_optint
and modified with UnixLabels.setsockopt_optint. These options have a
value of type int option
, with None
meaning ``disabled''.
(* | Timeout for input operations | *) | |
(* | Timeout for output operations | *) |
The socket options that can be consulted with UnixLabels.getsockopt_float and modified with UnixLabels.setsockopt_float. These options have a floating-point value representing a time in seconds. The value 0 means infinite timeout.
Connect to a server at the given address. Return a pair of buffered channels connected to the server. Remember to call Pervasives.flush on the output channel at the right times to ensure correct synchronization.
``Shut down'' a connection established with UnixLabels.open_connection; that is, transmit an end-of-file condition to the server reading on the other side of the connection.
Establish a server on the given address. The function given as first argument is called for each connection with two buffered channels connected to the client. A new process is created for each connection. The function UnixLabels.establish_server never returns normally.
: socket_domain | ; | (* | Socket domain | *) | |
: socket_type | ; | (* | Socket type | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | Socket protocol number | *) | |
: sockaddr | ; | (* | Address | *) | |
: string | ; | (* | Canonical host name | *) |
Address information returned by Unix.getaddrinfo.
addr_info_blocking_sexp
is like addr_info
, with of_sexp
that performs DNS lookup
to resolve Inet_addr.t
.
(* | Impose the given socket domain | *) | |
(* | Impose the given socket type | *) | |
(* | Impose the given protocol | *) | |
(* | Do not call name resolver, expect numeric IP address | *) | |
(* |
Fill the ai_canonname field
of the result
|
*) | |
Options to Unix.getaddrinfo.
getaddrinfo host service opts
returns a list of Unix.addr_info
records describing socket parameters and addresses suitable for
communicating with the given host and service. The empty list is
returned if the host or service names are unknown, or the constraints
expressed in opts
cannot be satisfied.
host
is either a host name or the string representation of an IP
address. host
can be given as the empty string; in this case,
the ``any'' address or the ``loopback'' address are used,
depending whether opts
contains AI_PASSIVE
.
service
is either a service name or the string representation of
a port number. service
can be given as the empty string;
in this case, the port field of the returned addresses is set to 0.
opts
is a possibly empty list of options that allows the caller
to force a particular socket domain (e.g. IPv6 only, or IPv4 only)
or a particular socket type (e.g. TCP only or UDP only).
getnameinfo addr opts
returns the host name and service name
corresponding to the socket address addr
. opts
is a possibly
empty list of options that governs how these names are obtained.
Raise Not_found
if an error occurs.
The following functions implement the POSIX standard terminal
interface. They provide control over asynchronous communication ports
and pseudo-terminals. Refer to the termios
man page for a complete
description.
Get a sockaddr from a hostname or IP, and a port
Set a timeout for a socket associated with an in_channel
Set a timeout for a socket associated with an out_channel
exit_immediately exit_code
immediately calls the exit
system call with the given
exit code without performing any other actions (unlike Pervasives.exit). Does not
return.
mknod ?file_kind ?perm ?major ?minor path
creates a filesystem
entry. Note that only FIFO-entries are guaranteed to be supported
across all platforms as required by the POSIX-standard. On Linux
directories and symbolic links cannot be created with this function.
Use Unix.mkdir and Unix.symlink instead there respectively.
S_REG
(= regular file)
0o600
(= read/write for user only)
0
0
Extract a file descriptor from a directory handle.
Synchronize the kernel buffers of a given file descriptor with disk, but do not necessarily write file attributes.
readdir_ino dh
return the next entry in a directory (((filename,
inode)
).
read_assume_fd_is_nonblocking fd ?pos ?len buf
calls the system call
read
ASSUMING THAT IT IS NOT GOING TO BLOCK. Reads at most len
bytes into buffer buf
starting at position pos
.
String.length buf - pos
write_assume_fd_is_nonblocking fd ?pos ?len buf
calls the system call
write
ASSUMING THAT IT IS NOT GOING TO BLOCK. Writes at most len
bytes from buffer buf
starting at position pos
.
String.length buf - pos
writev_assume_fd_is_nonblocking fd ?count iovecs
calls the system call
writev
ASSUMING THAT IT IS NOT GOING TO BLOCK using count
I/O-vectors iovecs
.
writev fd ?count iovecs
like writev_assume_fd_is_nonblocking, but does
not require the descriptor to not block. If you feel you have to
use this function, you should probably have chosen I/O-vectors that
build on bigstrings, because this function has to internally blit
the I/O-vectors (ordinary OCaml strings) to intermediate buffers on
the C-heap.
pselect rfds wfds efds timeout sigmask
like Core.Core_unix.select but
also allows one to wait for the arrival of signals.
mkstemp prefix
creates and opens a unique temporary file with prefix
,
automatically appending a suffix of six random characters to make the name unique.
Unlike C's mkstemp
, prefix
should not include six X's at the end.
mkdtemp prefix
creates a temporary directory with prefix
,
automatically appending a suffix of six random characters to make
the name unique.
getgrouplist user group
returns the list of groups to which user
belongs.
See 'man getgrouplist'.
Return the list of groups to which the user executing the process belongs.
mcast_join ?ifname sock addr
join a multicast group at addr
with socket sock
,
from source at source
if specified, optionally using network interface ifname
.
mcast_leave ?ifname sock addr
leaves a multicast group at addr
with socket sock
,
optionally using network interface ifname
.
CR-someday bnigito: I am open to suggestions as to how to better integrate these IP level options into the other get/set sockopt routines. It would seem we would need to change the ocaml unix lib to integrate them into that framework (and indeed to normalize them with join and leave we would need to add something like "(get/set)sockopt_group" or some such.
sweeks: Perhaps we should copy the approach used in Async.Socket.Opt
.
get_mcast_ttl sock
reads the time-to-live value of outgoing multicast packets for
socket sock
.
set_mcast_ttl sock ttl
sets the time-to-live value of outgoing multicast packets for
socket sock
to ttl
.
get_mcast_loop sock
reads the boolean argument that determines whether sent
multicast packets are looped back to local sockets.
set_mcast_loop sock loop
sets the boolean argument that determines whether sent
multicast packets are looped back to local sockets.
set_mcast_ifname sock "eth0"
sets outgoing multicast traffic on IPv4 UDP socket
sock
to go out through interface eth0
.
This uses setsockopt
with IP_MULTICAST_IF
and applies to multicast traffic. For
non-multicast applications, see Core.Linux_ext.bind_to_interface.
fork_exec prog args ~stdin ~stdout ~stderr ~setuid ~setgid
forks a new process that executes the program
in file prog
, with arguments args
. The pid of the new
process is returned immediately; the new process executes
concurrently with the current process.
The function raises EPERM if when using set{gid,uid}
and the user id is
not 0.
The standard input and outputs of the new process are connected
to the descriptors stdin
, stdout
and stderr
.
The close_on_exec flag is cleared from stderr
stdout
and stdin
so it's
safe to pass in fds with close_on_exec
set.
true
than we use PATH to find the process to exec.
setuid
and setgid
do not do a full id drop (e.g.: they save the id in
saved id) when the user does not have the privileges required to setuid to
anyone.: int | ; | (* | file system block size | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | fragment size | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | size of fs in frsize units | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | # free blocks | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | # free blocks for non-root | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | # inodes | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | # free inodes | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | # free inodes for non-root | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | file system ID | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | mount flags | *) | |
: int | ; | (* | maximum filename length | *) |
get file system statistics
The CIDR module moved into Core.Unix