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Hi there. I'm having trouble forking a long-running process from some code running under mod_perl2.

Everything works for the most part, but it seems that the forked process is holding open handles to Apache's logfiles - this means Apache won't restart while the process is running (I get a 'failed to open logfiles' message).

Here's the code I'm using:

use POSIX; # required for setsid

# Do not wait for child processes to complete
$SIG{CHLD} = 'IGNORE';

# fork (and make sure we did!)
defined (my $kid = fork) or die "Cannot fork: $!\n";

if ($kid) {
	return (1, $kid);
}else {
	# chdir to /, stops the process from preventing an unmount
	chdir '/' or die "Can't chdir to /: $!";

	# dump our STDIN and STDOUT handles
	open STDIN, '/dev/null' or die "Can't read /dev/null: $!";
	open STDOUT, '>/dev/null' or die "Can't write to /dev/null: $!";

	# redirect for logging
	open STDERR, '>', $log_filename or die "Can't write to log: $!";

	# Prevent locking to apache process
	setsid or die "Can't start a new session: $!";

	# execute the command
	exec( $cmd, @args );

	die "Failed to exec";
}

Back in the mod_perl1 days, I recall using $r->cleanup_for_exec to solve this problem, but it doesn't seem to be supported under mod_perl2. (Edit: Apparently it's not required any more..)

Any advice on how to correctly start a long-running process from mod_perl2 without these problems would be greatly appreciated!

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3 Answers

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You probably want to read this discussion. It seems you shouldn't fork on mod_perl unless you know how to prepare things. You have to use a module such as Apache2::SubProcess

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Try closing your STDIN/STDOUT handles before the fork.

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That'd completely break Apache.. The parent process still has to produce a response (and send it via STDOUT) for the client.. – Dan Jan 23 at 2:41
The parent process could send its response before forking; unless you're actually doing more work in the parent after the fork. If the log files are not on the STDIN/OUT/ERR descriptors, you could just start closing any open descriptors >2 you find in the child process. – nezroy Jan 23 at 2:47
Yeah problem is that apache process goes on to serve other requests when it's finished this one, killing it's STDERR breaks its logging, and I suspect killing its STDIN stops it from communicating with the parent proc. Anyway - I tried and it doesn't fix the problem ;) – Dan Jan 23 at 2:52
Try just looping from 3 to 1024 in the child, doing 'open($fh, "<&=#"); close($fh);', where # is the idx of the loop. Catch and ignore errors. Ideally this should close any remaining open descriptors. Maybe not a permanent fix but will potentially verify that open descriptors are the problem. – nezroy Jan 23 at 2:55
Also, way back in the Perl daemonizing day, it used to be prudent to fork twice. I don't remember why, just that it helped prevent orphaned processes. Worth a shot :) – nezroy Jan 23 at 2:56
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In my (formerly mod_perl, now FCGI) code, I have in the "else" clause of the "if ($kpid)",

    close STDIN;
    close STDOUT;
    close STDERR;
    setsid();

Also, for reasons that I forgot, I immediately fork again, and then in that child re-open STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR.

So it looks like:

$SIG{CHLD} = 'IGNORE';

# This should flush stdout.
my $ofh = select(STDOUT);$| = 1;select $ofh;

my $kpid = fork;
if ($kpid)
{
    # Parent process
    waitpid($kpid, 0);
}
else
{
    close STDIN;
    close STDOUT;
    close STDERR;
    setsid();
    my $gpid = fork;
    if (!$gpid)
    {
        open(STDIN, "</dev/null") ;#or print DEBUG2 "can't redirect stdin\n";
        open(STDOUT, ">/dev/null") ;#or print DEBUG2 "can't redirect stdout\n";
        open(STDERR, ">/dev/null") ;#or print DEBUG2 "can't redirect stderr\n";
        # Child process
        exec($pgm, @execargs) ;# or print DEBUG2 "exec failed\n";
    }
    exit 0;
}
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