Name
exit — cause normal process termination
DESCRIPTION
The exit() function causes
normal process termination and the value of status & 0377 is returned to
the parent (see wait(2)).
All functions registered with atexit(3) and on_exit(3) are called, in
the reverse order of their registration. (It is possible for
one of these functions to use atexit(3) or on_exit(3) to register an
additional function to be executed during exit processing;
the new registration is added to the front of the list of
functions that remain to be called.) If one of these
functions does not return (e.g., it calls _exit(2), or kills itself
with a signal), then none of the remaining functions is
called, and further exit processing (in particular, flushing
of stdio(3) streams) is
abandoned. If a function has been registered multiple times
using atexit(3) or on_exit(3), then it is
called as many times as it was registered.
All open stdio(3) streams are
flushed and closed. Files created by tmpfile(3) are removed.
The C standard specifies two constants, EXIT_SUCCESS and EXIT_FAILURE, that may be passed to
exit() to indicate successful
or unsuccessful termination, respectively.
RETURN VALUE
The exit() function does not
return.
CONFORMING TO
SVr4, 4.3BSD, POSIX.1-2001, C89, C99.
NOTES
It is undefined what happens if one of the functions
registered using atexit(3) and on_exit(3) calls either
exit() or longjmp(3).
The use of EXIT_SUCCESS and EXIT_FAILURE is slightly more
portable (to non-Unix environments) than the use of 0 and
some non-zero value like 1 or −1. In particular, VMS
uses a different convention.
BSD has attempted to standardize exit codes; see the file
<sysexits.h>.
After exit(), the exit
status must be transmitted to the parent process. There are
three cases. If the parent has set SA_NOCLDWAIT, or has set
the SIGCHLD handler to SIG_IGN, the status is discarded. If
the parent was waiting on the child it is notified of the
exit status. In both cases the exiting process dies
immediately. If the parent has not indicated that it is not
interested in the exit status, but is not waiting, the
exiting process turns into a "zombie" process (which is
nothing but a container for the single byte representing the
exit status) so that the parent can learn the exit status
when it later calls one of the wait(2) functions.
If the implementation supports the SIGCHLD signal, this
signal is sent to the parent. If the parent has set
SA_NOCLDWAIT, it is undefined whether a SIGCHLD signal is
sent.
If the process is a session leader and its controlling
terminal is the controlling terminal of the session, then
each process in the foreground process group of this
controlling terminal is sent a SIGHUP signal, and the
terminal is disassociated from this session, allowing it to
be acquired by a new controlling process.
If the exit of the process causes a process group to
become orphaned, and if any member of the newly orphaned
process group is stopped, then a SIGHUP signal followed by a
SIGCONT signal will be sent to each process in this process
group.
SEE ALSO
_exit(2), wait(2), atexit(3), on_exit(3), tmpfile(3)
Copyright (C) 2001 Andries Brouwer <aeb@cwi.nl>.
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