In C, is int main(int argc, char *argv[])
really needed to receive program arguments? In other words, when defining the main function with the signature int main(void)
, is it possible to recover the program arguments using only POSIX interfaces?
I feel like I'm missing something, seeing that:
- POSIX defines multiple interfaces to retrieve other process-specific information. For instance, there are interfaces for environment variables (arguably inherited from C99, but also extended with functions like
unsetenv()
) and host identification (gethostid()
). - Specific operating systems define "global" ways to retrieve the command line arguments. For instance, Windows supplies the
GetCommandLineW
andCommandLineToArgvW
functions, and HP-UX supplies the global variables__argc_value
and__argv_value
. Linux has/proc/self/cmdline
, which can be parsed intoargv
andargc
.
int f(void)
. How do you access any arguments you passed to the function from the caller?main
which then calls this function. That would be fine as of the standard.argc
andargv
that are passed to main. Obviously the startup code has to get them in an implementation-dependent way, since it's part of the platform ABI. On most (all?) POSIX platforms, the first instruction from the binary that wasexecve()
ed is not the first instruction ofmain()
. The point you're arguing, that there's no other POSIX standard way to see your cmdline args, appears to be true, but Rhymoid's correct that it could have been like env vars.