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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)


NAME    [Toc]    [Back]

     sproc, sprocsp, nsproc - create a new share group process

C SYNOPSIS    [Toc]    [Back]

     #include <sys/types.h>
     #include <sys/prctl.h>

     pid_t sproc (void (*entry)	(void *), unsigned inh,	...);

     Type of optional third argument:
     void *arg;

     pid_t sprocsp (void (*entry) (void	*, size_t), unsigned inh,
		    void *arg, caddr_t sp, size_t len);

DESCRIPTION    [Toc]    [Back]

     The sproc and sprocsp system calls	are a variant of the standard fork(2)
     call.  Like fork, the sproc calls create a	new process that is a clone of
     the calling process.  The difference is that after	an sproc call, the new
     child process shares the virtual address space of the parent process
     (assuming that this sharing option	is selected, as	described below),
     rather than simply	being a	copy of	the parent.  The parent	and the	child
     each have their own program counter value and stack pointer, but all the
     text and data space is visible to both processes.	This provides one of
     the basic mechanisms upon which parallel programs can be built.

     The system	call nsproc is no longer supported as an external interface;
     any calls to it should be replaced	with sprocsp.

     A group of	processes created by sproc calls from a	common ancestor	is
     referred to as a share group or shared process group.  A share group is
     initially formed when a process first executes an sproc or	sprocsp	call.
     All subsequent sproc calls	by either the parent or	other children in this
     share group will add another process to the share group.  In addition to
     virtual address space, members of a share group can share other
     attributes	such as	file tables, current working directories, effective
     userids and others	described below.

     The three calls differ in just two	ways - how the stack for the new
     process is	initialized and	in the interpretation of the inh argument.  If
     the argument sp is	set to NULL then the system will create	a stack	region
     for the child.  This stack	region will not	overlap	with any other area of
     the share group's address space.  These stack regions grow	downward, and
     are automatically grown if	the process accesses new areas of the stack.
     The len argument specifies	how much margin	(in bytes) the system should
     attempt to	leave for the child's stack.  This margin is used when the
     system attempts to	place additional stacks	or other virtual spaces	(e.g.
     from mmap).  The system will attempt to leave enough room such that the
     stack could grow to len bytes if it needs to.  This margin	in no way sets
     a limit on	stack growth nor guarantees a particular stack size.  The
     process can continue to grow its stack up to the maximum permissible size
     (specified	via the	resource limit RLIMIT_STACK) as	long as	it doesn't run



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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)



     into any other virtual space of the share group.  Conversely, if the
     share group's virtual space gets crowded, parts of	the stack that haven't
     yet been claimed could be used for	additional stacks or other requested
     virtual spaces.  A	minimum	of 16K for len is recommended.	Note that
     there are no 'red'	zones -	a process growing its stack could easily start
     accessing the stack of another process in the share group.

     If	len is set to be smaller than the stack	size required by the sproc at
     creation time, an error message indicating	that there is "not enough
     memory to lock stack" may be reported to the system log. This indicates
     that the system attempted to place	the sproc's stack using	the len	value
     supplied in the sprocsp call, but that the	initial	size of	the sproc's
     stack would overlap into other portions of	the share group's virtual
     space.  The offending sproc will be killed.

     If	sp is set to a valid virtual address in	the share group	then the stack
     of	the new	process	is set to this value.  With this option, the entire
     responsibility of stack management	is the calling process's.  The system
     will no longer attempt to automatically grow the process's	stack region.
     sp	should point to	the top	(highest address) of the new stack. It will
     automatically be rounded down to provide the appropriate alignment.  No
     validity checks are made on sp.

     sproc is equivalent to calling sprocsp with the sp	argument set to	NULL
     and the len argument set to the rlim_cur value of the resource limit
     RLIMIT_STACK.  This means that each time a	process	calls sproc, the total
     size of each member of the	share group increases by the size of the new
     process's stack.

     Calling sproc or sprocsp too often, when the stack	size is	set very large
     can easily	cause the share	group to grow larger than the per-process
     maximum allowable size {PROCSIZE_MAX} [see	intro(2)].  In this case, the
     call will fail and	return ENOMEM.

     A process with lots of distinct virtual spaces (e.g. lots of files	mapped
     via mmap(2)) can fragment the calling process's address space such	that
     it	is impossible to find a	suitable place for the new child's stack.
     This case will also cause sproc or	sprocsp	to fail.

     The new child process resulting from sproc(2) differs from	a normally
     forked process in the following ways:

	If the PR_SADDR	bit is set in inh then the new process will share ALL
	the virtual space of the parent, except	the PRDA (see below).  During
	a normal fork(2) or if the PR_SADDR is not set,	the writable portions
	of the process's address space are marked copy-on-write.  If either
	process	writes into a given page, then a copy is made of the page and
	given to the process.  Thus writes by one process will not be visible
	to the other forks.  With the PR_SADDR option of sproc(2), however,
	all the	processes have read/write privileges to	the entire virtual
	space.




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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)



	The new	process	can reference the parent's stack.

	The new	process	has its	own process data area (PRDA) which contains,
	among other things, the	process	id.  Part of the PRDA is used by the
	system,	part by	system libraries, and part is available	to the
	application program [see <sys/prctl.h>].  The PRDA is at a fixed
	virtual	address	in each	process	which is given by the constant PRDA
	defined	in prctl.h.

	The machine state (general/floating point registers) is	not duplicated
	with the exception of the floating point control register.  This means
	that if	a process has enabled floating point traps, these will be
	enabled	in the child process.

	If created via sproc the new process will be invoked as	follows:

		    entry(void *arg)

	If created via sprocsp the new process will be invoked as follows:

		    entry(void *arg, size_t stksize)

	where stksize is the len argument the parent passed to sprocsp.

     In	addition to the	attributes inherited during the	sproc call itself, the
     inh flag to sproc can request that	the new	process	have future changes in
     any member	of the share group be applied to itself.  A process can	only
     request that a child process share	attributes that	it itself is sharing.
     The creator of a share group is effectively sharing everything.  These
     persisting	attributes are selectable via the inh flag:

     PR_SADDR  All virtual space attributes (shared memory, mapped files, data
	       space) are shared.  If one process in a share group attaches to
	       a shared	memory segment,	all processes in the group can access
	       that segment.

     PR_SFDS   The open	file table is kept synchronized.  If one member	of the
	       share group opens a file, the open file descriptor will appear
	       in the file tables of all members of the	share group.

	       Note especially that the	converse is also true: if one member
	       closes a	file, it is closed for all members of the group; this
	       has been	known to surprise applications programmers!  Note also
	       that there is only one file pointer for each file descriptor
	       shared within a shared process group.

     PR_SDIR   The current and root directories	are kept synchronized.	If one
	       member of the group issues a chdir(2) or	chroot(2) call,	the
	       current working directory or root directory will	be changed for
	       all members of the share	group.





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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)



     PR_SUMASK The file	creation mask, umask is	kept synchronized.

     PR_SULIMIT    [Toc]    [Back]
	       The limit on maximum file size is kept synchronized.

     PR_SID    The real	and effective user and group ids are kept
	       synchronized.

     To	take advantage of sharing all possible attributes, the constant
     PR_SALL may be used.

     In	addition to specifying shared attributes, the inh flag can be used to
     pass flags	that govern certain operations within the sproc	call itself.
     Currently two flags are supported:

     PR_BLOCK  causes the calling process to be	blocked	[see blockproc(2)]
	       before returning	from a successful call.	 This can be used to
	       allow the child process access to the parent's stack without
	       the possibility of collision.

     PR_NOLIBC causes the child	to not join the	C library (libc) arena (see
	       below).	If all sproc calls that	a process makes	specify	this
	       flag then the C library arena will never	be created.  The
	       creation	of the C library arena includes	the initialization of
	       the per-thread system error value errno.

     No	scheduling synchronization is implied between shared processes:	they
     are free to run on	any processor in any sequence.	Any required
     synchronization must be provided by the application using locks and
     semaphores	[see usinit(3P)] or other mechanisms.

     If	one member of a	share group exits or otherwise dies, its stack is
     removed from the virtual space of the share group.	 If the	process	which
     first created the share group exits, its stack is not removed.  This
     ensures continued access by other share group members to the environment
     and starting argument vectors.  In	addition, if the PR_SETEXITSIG option
     [see prctl(2)] has	been enabled then all remaining	members	of the share
     group will	be signaled.

     By	default, standard C library routines such as printf and	malloc
     function properly even though two or more shared processes	access them
     simultaneously.  To accomplish this, a special arena is set up [see
     usinit(3P)] to hold the locks and semaphores required.  Unless the
     PR_NOLIBC flag is present,	the parent will	initialize and each child will
     join the C	library	arena.	Arenas have a configurable maximum number of
     processes that can	join, that is set when the arena is first created.
     This maximum (default 8) can be configured	using usconfig(3P).  Each
     process in	the share group	needs access to	this arena and requires	a
     single file lock [see fcntl(2)].  This may	require	more file locks	to be
     configured	into the system	than the default system	configuration
     provides.	Programs using share groups that are invoking system services
     (either system calls or libc routines), should be compiled	with the



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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)



     feature test macro	_SGI_MP_SOURCE set in any file containing functions
     that share	group members might access (see	CAVEATS	section	below).
     Currently,	this is	only required for correct treatment of the system
     error value errno (see discussion below) but in the future	may be
     required for the correct functioning of other services.

     sproc will	fail and no new	process	will be	created	if one or more of the
     following are true:

     [ENOMEM]	    If there is	not enough virtual space to allocate a new
		    stack.  The	default	stack size is settable via prctl(2),
		    or setrlimit(2).

     [EAGAIN]	    The	system-imposed limit on	the total number of processes
		    under execution, {NPROC} [see intro(2)], would be
		    exceeded.

     [EAGAIN]	    The	system-imposed limit on	the total number of processes
		    under execution by a single	user {CHILD_MAX} [see
		    intro(2)], would be	exceeded.

     [EAGAIN]	    Amount of system memory required is	temporarily
		    unavailable.

     [EINVAL]	    sp was null	and len	was less than 8192.

     [EPERM]	    The	system call is not permitted from a pthreaded program
		    (see CAVEATS section below).

     When called with the PR_NOLIBC flag not set, in addition to the above
     errors sproc will fail and	no new process will be created if one or more
     of	the following are true:

     [ENOSPC]	    If the size	of the share group exceeds the number of users
		    specified via usconfig(3P) (8 by default).	Any changes
		    via	usconfig(3P) must be done BEFORE the first sproc is
		    performed.

     [ENOLCK]	    There are not enough file locks in the system.

     [EACCES]	    The	shared arena file (located in /usr/tmp)	used in
		    conjunction	with the C library could not be	opened or
		    created for	read/write.

     New process pid # could not join I/O arena:<..>
		    if the new share group member could	not properly join the
		    C library arena.  The new process exits with a -1.

     See also the possible errors from usinit(3P).






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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)


NOTES    [Toc]    [Back]

     IrisGL processes that share virtual address space will share access to
     the graphics hardware and associated data structures.  IrisGL calls made
     by	such processes must be single threaded to avoid	simultaneous access to
     these resources.  Furthermore, gflush(3G) must be called prior to leaving
     the critical section represented by the set of graphics calls.

     This manual entry has described ways in which processes created by	sproc
     differ from those created by fork.	 Attributes and	behavior not mentioned
     as	different should be assumed to work the	same way for sproc processes
     as	for processes created by fork.	Here are some respects in which	the
     two types of processes are	the same:

	The parent and child after an sproc each have a	unique process id
	(pid), but are in the same process group.

	A signal sent to a specific pid	in a share group [see kill(2)] will be
	received by only the process to	which it was sent.  Other members of
	the share group	will not be affected.  A signal	sent to	an entire
	process	group will be received by all the members of the process
	group, regardless of share group affiliations [see killpg(3B)].	 See
	prctl(2) for ways to alter this	behavior.

	If the child process resulting from an sproc dies or calls exit(2),
	the parent process receives the	SIGCLD signal [see sigset(2),
	sigaction(2), and sigvec(3B)].

CAVEATS    [Toc]    [Back]

     Removing virtual space (e.g. unmapping a file) is an expensive operation
     and forces	all processes in the share group to single thread their	memory
     management	operations for the duration of the unmap system	call.  The
     reason for	this is	that the system	must insure that no other processes in
     the share group can reference the virtual space that is being removed or
     the underlying physical pages during or after the removal.	 To accomplish
     this, the system memory management	code does the following:

	Locks a	lock on	the share group	that prevents any other	process	in the
	group from doing any memory management operations (page	faults,
	protection faults, second level	TLB misses, mmap(2), munmap(2),
	sbrk(2)).

	Sends TLB shootdown interrupts to all other cpus in the	system that
	cause them to remove any entries from the processor's Translation
	Lookaside Buffer (TLB) for the share group for the address range being
	deleted.

	Removes	the virtual mapping from the share group's memory management
	data structures	and frees any underlying physical pages.

	Releases the lock to allow parallel operations to continue.





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SPROC(2)							      SPROC(2)



     pixie(1) and prof(1) do not work on processes that	call sproc and do not
     share address space (i.e.	PR_SADDR is not	set).

     Note that the global variable errno is normally a single location shared
     by	all processes in a share group in which	address	space is a shared
     attribute.	 This means that if multiple processes in the group make
     system calls or other library functions which set errno, the value	of
     errno is no longer	useful,	since it may be	overwritten at any time	by a
     call in another process in	the share group.  To have each thread have its
     own private version of errno, programs should be compiled with the
     feature test macro	_SGI_MP_SOURCE defined before including	the header
     file errno.h.  Note however that some system supplied libraries have not
     been converted to set the per-thread error	value -	they will only set the
     global error value.  This will be corrected in future releases.  This
     means an application compiled with	_SGI_MP_SOURCE and directly
     referencing errno will reference the per-thread error value and not get
     the global	error value that a non-converted library might have set.
     There are two workarounds to this problem:	1) define the feature test
     macro _SGI_MP_SOURCE only in files	that test errno	as the result of an
     error from	a function defined in libc, libw, libm,	libadm,	libgen,	or
     libmalloc;	or 2) for accesses of errno in response	to errors from
     functions not in one of the above mentioned libraries, call goserrorerror
     print out the error will not get the correct error	value.	In this	case
     strerror(goserror()) should be used instead.

     rld(1) does not support execution of sproc	during shared object
     initialization, such as that described under the -init flag to ld(1).  In
     particular, C++ users must	take care that their code does not contain
     global objects which have constructors which call sproc(2).  Should
     sproc(2) be called	during object initialization, results will generally
     be	non-deterministic and unpredictable.

     The sproc model of	threading is incompatible with POSIX threads.
     Attempts to create	an sproc process from a	pthreaded program will be
     rejected [see pthreads(5)].

SEE ALSO    [Toc]    [Back]

      
      
     blockproc(2), fcntl(2), fork(2), intro(2),	prctl(2), setrlimit(2),
     goserror(3C), oserror(3C),	pcreate(3C), pthreads(5), usconfig(3P),
     usinit(3P), rld(1), ld(1).

DIAGNOSTICS    [Toc]    [Back]

     Upon successful completion, sproc returns the process id of the new
     process.  Otherwise, a value of -1	is returned to the calling process,
     and errno is set to indicate the error.


									PPPPaaaaggggeeee 7777
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