I have a subprocess (running on MacOS) that I want to kill itself if the parent quits, exits, terminates, is killed or crashes. Having followed the advice from How to make child process die after parent exits? I can't get it to quietly kill itself if the parent program crashes. It will go to 100% CPU until I manually kill it.
Here are the key points of the code:
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
// Catch signals
signal(SIGINT, interruptHandler);
signal(SIGABRT, interruptHandler);
signal(SIGTERM, interruptHandler);
signal(SIGPIPE, interruptHandler);
// Create kqueue event filter
int kqueue_fd = kqueue();
struct kevent kev, recv_kev;
EV_SET(&kev, parent_pid, EVFILT_PROC, EV_ADD|EV_ENABLE, NOTE_EXIT, 0, NULL);
kevent(kqueue_fd, &kev, 1, NULL, 0, NULL);
struct pollfd kqpoll;
kqpoll.fd = kqueue_fd;
kqpoll.events = POLLIN;
// Start a run loop
while(processEvents())
{
if(kill(parent_pid, 0) == -1)
if(errno == ESRCH)
break;
if(poll(&kqpoll, 1, 0) == 1)
if(kevent(kqueue_fd, NULL, 0, &recv_kev, 1, NULL))
break;
parent_pid = getppid();
if(parent_pid == 1)
break;
sleep(a_short_time);
// (simple code here causes subprocess to sleep longer if it hasn't
// received any events recently)
}
}
Answering my own question here:
The reason for this problem was not down to detecting whether the parent process had died. In processEvents()
I was polling the pipe from the parent process to see if there was any communication. When the parent died, poll()
returned a value of 1 and the read loop thought there was infinite data waiting to be read.
The solution was to detect whether the pipe had been disconnected or not.