/* * Copyright (c) 2014 Nicira, Inc. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at: * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ #include #include "daemon.h" #include "daemon-private.h" #include #include #include #include "util.h" #include "ovs-thread.h" #include "openvswitch/vlog.h" VLOG_DEFINE_THIS_MODULE(daemon); /* For each of the standard file descriptors, whether to replace it by * /dev/null (if false) or keep it for the daemon to use (if true). */ static bool save_fds[3]; /* Will daemonize() really detach? */ bool get_detach(void) { return detach; } /* If configured with set_pidfile() or set_detach(), creates the pid file and * detaches from the foreground session. */ void daemonize(void) { daemonize_start(); daemonize_complete(); } /* Sets up a following call to daemonize() to create a pidfile named 'name'. * If 'name' begins with '/' (or contains ':' in windows), then it is treated * as an absolute path. Otherwise, it is taken relative to RUNDIR, * which is $(prefix)/var/run by default. * * If 'name' is null, then program_name followed by ".pid" is used. */ void set_pidfile(const char *name) { assert_single_threaded(); free(pidfile); pidfile = make_pidfile_name(name); } /* A daemon doesn't normally have any use for the file descriptors for stdin, * stdout, and stderr after it detaches. To keep these file descriptors from * e.g. holding an SSH session open, by default detaching replaces each of * these file descriptors by /dev/null. But a few daemons expect the user to * redirect stdout or stderr to a file, in which case it is desirable to keep * these file descriptors. This function, therefore, disables replacing 'fd' * by /dev/null when the daemon detaches. */ void daemon_save_fd(int fd) { ovs_assert(fd == STDIN_FILENO || fd == STDOUT_FILENO || fd == STDERR_FILENO); save_fds[fd] = true; } /* Returns a readable and writable fd for /dev/null, if successful, otherwise * a negative errno value. The caller must not close the returned fd (because * the same fd will be handed out to subsequent callers). */ static int get_null_fd(void) { static int null_fd; #ifndef _WIN32 char *device = "/dev/null"; #else char *device = "nul"; #endif if (!null_fd) { null_fd = open(device, O_RDWR); if (null_fd < 0) { int error = errno; VLOG_ERR("could not open %s: %s", device, ovs_strerror(error)); null_fd = -error; } } return null_fd; } /* Close standard file descriptors (except any that the client has requested we * leave open by calling daemon_save_fd()). If we're started from e.g. an SSH * session, then this keeps us from holding that session open artificially. */ void close_standard_fds(void) { int null_fd = get_null_fd(); if (null_fd >= 0) { int fd; for (fd = 0; fd < 3; fd++) { if (!save_fds[fd]) { dup2(null_fd, fd); } } } /* Disable logging to stderr to avoid wasting CPU time. */ vlog_set_levels(NULL, VLF_CONSOLE, VLL_OFF); }