On Thu, 2007-10-18 at 17:34 -0700, Garrick Staples wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 18, 2007 at 08:07:46PM -0400, Jerry Geis alleged:
> > I have a C program on centos. When I call system("some_program &");
> > how do I get the PID of the some_program?
> >
> > I cant just list processes as there might be more than one some_program
> > active.
> > I need to know the one that I just started.
Is each instance of "some_program" spawned from the same parent? If not,
the PPID of the child can be used to differentiate between the children.
>
> You don't. At least not by using system().
>
> Use fork() and exec() and you will have the child pid.
Unfortunately (maybe), the environment that is provided by the system
call (the command interpreter is invoked - /etc/profile, /etc/bashrc et
al may come into play) is not established with fork and the exec* family
of commands. Programming effort may be needed if this is important.
Changing the invocation to some variation of
"/bin/bash some_params some_program &"
might do the trick when using the fork/exec combo.
> <snip sig stuff>
--
Bill