I create a child process using a fork()
. How can the parent process kill the child process if the child process cannot complete its execution within 30 seconds? I want to allow the child process to execute up to 30 seconds. If it takes more than 30 seconds, the parent process will kill it. Do you have any idea to do that?
问题:
回答1:
Send a SIGTERM or a SIGKILL to it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIGKILL
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIGTERM
SIGTERM is polite and lets the process clean up before it goes, whereas, SIGKILL is for when it won't listen >:)
Example from the shell (man page: http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/CGI/man-cgi?kill )
kill -9 pid
In C, you can do the same thing using the kill syscall:
kill(pid, SIGKILL);
See the following man page: http://linux.die.net/man/2/kill
回答2:
Try something like this:
#include <signal.h>
pid_t child_pid = -1 ; //Global
void kill_child(int sig)
{
kill(child_pid,SIGKILL);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
signal(SIGALRM,(void (*)(int))kill_child);
child_pid = fork();
if (child_pid > 0) {
/*PARENT*/
alarm(30);
/*
* Do parent's tasks here.
*/
wait(NULL);
}
else if (child_pid == 0){
/*CHILD*/
/*
* Do child's tasks here.
*/
}
}
回答3:
In the parent process, fork()'s return value is the process ID of the child process. Stuff that value away somewhere for when you need to terminate the child process. fork() returns zero(0) in the child process.
When you need to terminate the child process, use the kill(2) function with the process ID returned by fork(), and the signal you wish to deliver (e.g. SIGTERM).
Remember to call wait() on the child process to prevent any lingering zombies.