NAME
daemon
—
run in the background
LIBRARY
library “libc”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<stdlib.h>
int
daemon
(int
nochdir, int
noclose);
int
daemonfd
(int
chdirfd, int
nullfd);
DESCRIPTION
Thedaemon
()
function is for programs wishing to detach themselves from the controlling
terminal and run in the background as system daemons.
Unless the argument nochdir is
non-zero,
daemon
()
changes the current working directory to the root
(/).
Unless the argument noclose is
non-zero,
daemon
()
will redirect standard input, standard output, and standard error to
/dev/null.
The
daemonfd
()
function is equivalent to the daemon
() function
except that arguments are the descriptors for the current working directory
and to the descriptor to /dev/null.
If chdirfd is equal to (-1) the current working directory is not changed.
If nullfd is equals to (-1) the redirection of standard input, standard output, and standard error is not closed.
RETURN VALUES
The daemon
() and
daemonfd
() functions return the value 0 if
successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global
variable errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
The daemon
() and
daemonfd
() function may fail and set
errno for any of the errors specified for the library
functions fork(2)
open(2,) and
setsid(2).
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The daemon
() function first appeared in
4.4BSD. The daemonfd
()
function first appeared in FreeBSD 12.0.
CAVEATS
Unless the noclose argument is non-zero,
daemon
() will close the first three file descriptors
and redirect them to /dev/null. Normally, these
correspond to standard input, standard output, and standard error. However,
if any of those file descriptors refer to something else, they will still be
closed, resulting in incorrect behavior of the calling program. This can
happen if any of standard input, standard output, or standard error have
been closed before the program was run. Programs using
daemon
() should therefore either call
daemon
() before opening any files or sockets, or
verify that any file descriptors obtained have values greater than 2.
The daemon
() function temporarily ignores
SIGHUP
while calling
setsid(2) to prevent a parent session group leader's calls to
fork(2) and then
_exit(2) from prematurely terminating the child process.