On Linux systems (either 32- or 64-bit), what is the size of pid_t
, uid_t
, and gid_t
?
3 Answers
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
int main()
{
printf("pid_t: %zu\n", sizeof(pid_t));
printf("uid_t: %zu\n", sizeof(uid_t));
printf("gid_t: %zu\n", sizeof(gid_t));
}
EDIT: Per popular request (and because, realistically, 99% of the people coming to this question are going to be running x86 or x86_64)...
On an i686 and x86_64 (so, 32-bit and 64-bit) processor running Linux >= 3.0.0, the answer is:
pid_t: 4
uid_t: 4
gid_t: 4
-
5The answers are portable to all Linux targets as far as I know. They're all 4. Jul 5, 2011 at 0:16
-
18Actually, the code was not portable, because the format specifier was
%d
butsizeof
returns asize_t
, which is unsigned and not necessarily the size of anint
. The correct portable format specifier is%zu
. I have fixed it. Apr 3, 2014 at 21:58 -
3Would be nice to also include the results for at least one example architecture. Jan 4, 2015 at 20:28
-
1
On intel architectures, sizes are defined in /usr/include/bits/typesizes.h
:
#define __UID_T_TYPE __U32_TYPE
#define __GID_T_TYPE __U32_TYPE
#define __PID_T_TYPE __S32_TYPE
In other words, uid_t
and gid_t
are unsigned 32-bit integers and pid_t
is a signed 32-bit integer. This applies for both 32- and 64-bits.
I am not sure what they are on other architectures offhand as I don't have any available at the moment, but the definitive way is to compile a program which prints the output of sizeof(uid_t)
, etc.
The standard defines pid_t
as a "signed integer type" and uid_t
and gid_t
merely as "integer types" (so portable code shouldn't assume any particular type for them).
-
My manpage for
types.h
, which claims to be POSIX, saysuid_t
andgid_t
are integer types (no mention of signed or unsigned), andpid_t
is a signed integer type.– ptomatoOct 9, 2013 at 17:40 -
@Chris I was wrong about "pid_t", so I corrected my posting. The standard doesn't say anything about the signedness of "uid_t" or "gid_t", however. Oct 9, 2013 at 21:41
-
Note that the standard also provides the
id_t
type, which “can be used to contain at least apid_t
,uid_t
, orgid_t
”. Apr 3, 2014 at 22:00 -
The pid_t data type is a signed integer type which is capable of representing a process ID. In the GNU C Library, this is an int. (gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/…)– debugMay 30, 2018 at 10:22