If I use wait(null)
, and I know (for sure) that the child will finish (exit) before we reach to wait(null)
in the parent process, does the wait(null)
block the parent process?
I mean, the wait()
won't get any signal, right?
int main() {
int pipe_descs[2];
int i, n, p;
srand(time(NULL(;
pipe(pipe_descs);
for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) {
pid_t status = fork();
if (status == 0) {
n = rand() % 100;
p = (int) getpid();
write(pipe_descs[1], &n, sizeof(int));
write(pipe_descs[1], &p, sizeof(int));
exit(0);
}
else {
read(pipe_descs[0], &n, sizeof(int));
read(pipe_descs[0], &p, sizeof(int));
printf(" %d %d\n", n, p);
wait(NULL); // (1)
}
}
return 0;
}
wait()
s for it, except for the parent to handleSIGCHLD
manually. In particular, it is not safe to assume that that will always happen in your example code.null
?