1

Hi all I have to run a binary file using c++ and kill it.

My code look like

static int PROCESS_PID=0;

void startService(bool startservice){

if(startservice==true){
 pid_t PID = fork();
 if(PID == 0) {
   PROCESS_PID = getpid();
   printf("the child's pid is: %d\n", PROCESS_PID);
   system("./process");
 }
}

else{
 kill(PROCESS_PID, SIGUSR1); //kill process inside child process
 }

}

But when I kill the process the entire program get exited. Any Idea ? Is there anything wrong with my code ?

Thanks....

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2 Answers 2

3

When you call system() you are starting a third process -- one which you do not have the pid for. Use exec() instead.

Worse though, your kill() call is only made in the case that startservice!=true, and in this case PROCESS_PID==0... so you're killing process 0 (which will send the signal to all processes in your current process group).

2
  • Actually I was using exec() instead of system() system but not working
    – Haris
    Sep 9, 2013 at 11:50
  • The two calls are not equivalent; one is not a substitute for the other... so your work-around isn't a work-around that meets your needs. Post (in a new question) your real problem, the exec failure, so that the real problem can be solved.
    – mah
    Sep 9, 2013 at 11:54
1

The reason it's not working is because you are double-fork()ing, as system() will perform a fork()/exec() in order to execute the command you want to run.

If you want better control of the child process (including killing it) then write your own version of system() where you perform the fork() and exec() yourself.

There are many examples of how to do this knocking around the internet.

2
  • Actually I was using exec() instead of system() system but not working
    – Haris
    Sep 9, 2013 at 11:49
  • 1
    @Haris Then your question should focus on that code, not the code you posted.
    – trojanfoe
    Sep 9, 2013 at 11:50

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