ref: e59ffed426f628794d4669f152eff9a6239b99db
dir: /man/10/kproc/
.TH KPROC 10.2 .SH NAME kproc, setpri, swiproc, pexit \- kernel process creation, priority change, interrupt and termination .SH SYNOPSIS .ta \w'\fLchar* 'u .B void kproc(char *name, void (*func)(void*), void *arg, int flags); .PP .B int setpri(int pri); .PP .B void swiproc(Proc *p, int interp); .PP .B void pexit(char*, int); .SH DESCRIPTION .I Kproc creates a new Inferno kernel process to run the function .IR func , which is invoked as .BR "(*func)(arg)" . The string .I name is copied into the .B text field of the .B Proc structure of the new process; although the value is not visible to Limbo applications, it can appear in system messages written to the console. The process is made runnable; it will run when selected by the scheduler. .PP The new process always acquires the following attributes from the creating process: .IP owner (Inferno user name) .br host user and group IDs (in .I emu only) .br floating-point attributes .PP Several resources can be shared with the creating process on request, as determined by .IR flags , which is the logical OR of a subset of the following: .TF KPDUPENVG .TP .B KPDUPPG If set, the new process shares the caller's process group, which includes its process group ID (for .IR killgrp ), name space (mounts, root and current directory), and PIN for .B /dev/pin (see .IR cons (3)). .TP .B KPDUPFDG If set, the new process shares the caller's file descriptor group; otherwise, it has no file descriptor group, and (if it intends to open files) must call .IR newfgrp (10.2) to obtain an empty file descriptor group. .TP .B KPDUPENVG If set, the new process shares the caller's environment group (currently applies in .I emu only). .TP .B KPDUP Equivalent to all of the above. .PD .PP If a particular option is not set, the new process will have a .B nil reference for the corresponding resource. .PP .I Setpri sets the priority of the calling process to .I pri and returns its previous priority level. If a (now) higher priority process is ready to run, the system will reschedule. The available priority levels are shown below, arranged from highest to lowest priority, with examples of the type of processes intended to use them: .TF PriBackground .TP .B PriLock The highest priority, used by .IR lock (10.2) for a process entering a critical section .TP .B PriRealtime Intended for processes supporting applications with real-time constraints, such as video telephony. .TP .B PriHicodec MPEG codec .TP .B PriLocodec Audio codec .TP .B PriHi Any task with keen time constraints. .TP .B PriNormal The priority of most processes in the system. .TP .B PriLo .TP .B PriBackground .PD .PP .I Swiproc sends a software interrupt to process .IR p , causing it to wake from .IR sleep (10.2) with an .IR error (10.2) `interrupted'. Unless .I interp is non-zero (ie, the Dis interpreter is the caller), the process is also marked `killed'. .PP An Inferno process terminates only when it calls .IR pexit , thereby terminating itself. There is no mechanism for one process to force the termination of another, although it can send a software interrupt using .IR swiproc . The arguments to .I pexit are ignored in Inferno, but are included for compatibility with kernel components of Plan 9; use .IP .EX pexit("", 0); .EE