I'm currently passing the pid on the command line to the child, but is there a way to do this in the Win32 API? Alternatively, can someone alleviate my fear that the pid I'm passing might belong to another process after some time if the parent has died?
|
|
Notice that if the parent process terminates it is very possible and even likely that the PID will be reused for another process. This is standard windows operation. So to be sure, once you receive the id of the parent and are sure it is really your parent you should open a handle to it and use that. |
||
|
|
|
|
Check out this article on CodeProject: Get Parent Process PID |
||
|
|
|
|
Just in case anyone else runs across this question and is looking for a code sample, I had to do this recently for a Python library project I'm working on. Here's the test/sample code I came up with:
|
||
|
|
|
|
A better way to do this is to call DuplicateHandle() to create an inheritable duplicate of your process handle. Then create the child process and pass the handle value on the command line. Close the duplicated handle in the parent process. When the child's done, it will need to Close its copy as well. |
||||
|
|
|
"Alternatively, can someone alleviate my fear that the pid I'm passing might belong to another process after some time if the parent has died?" Yes the PID can be reused. Unlike UNIX, Windows does not maintain a strong parent-child relationship tree. |
||
|
|
