/* * fork_process.c * A simple wrapper on top of fork(). This does not handle the * EXEC_BACKEND case; it might be extended to do so, but it would be * considerably more complex. * * Copyright (c) 1996-2010, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * * IDENTIFICATION * $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/postmaster/fork_process.c,v 1.10 2010/01/02 16:57:50 momjian Exp $ */ #include "postgres.h" #include "postmaster/fork_process.h" #include #include #include #ifndef WIN32 /* * Wrapper for fork(). Return values are the same as those for fork(): * -1 if the fork failed, 0 in the child process, and the PID of the * child in the parent process. */ pid_t fork_process(void) { pid_t result; #ifdef LINUX_PROFILE struct itimerval prof_itimer; #endif /* * Flush stdio channels just before fork, to avoid double-output problems. * Ideally we'd use fflush(NULL) here, but there are still a few non-ANSI * stdio libraries out there (like SunOS 4.1.x) that coredump if we do. * Presently stdout and stderr are the only stdio output channels used by * the postmaster, so fflush'ing them should be sufficient. */ fflush(stdout); fflush(stderr); #ifdef LINUX_PROFILE /* * Linux's fork() resets the profiling timer in the child process. If we * want to profile child processes then we need to save and restore the * timer setting. This is a waste of time if not profiling, however, so * only do it if commanded by specific -DLINUX_PROFILE switch. */ getitimer(ITIMER_PROF, &prof_itimer); #endif result = fork(); if (result == 0) { /* fork succeeded, in child */ #ifdef LINUX_PROFILE setitimer(ITIMER_PROF, &prof_itimer, NULL); #endif } return result; } #endif /* ! WIN32 */