DESCRIPTION
The exec family of functions replaces the current process image with a new process image. The functions described in this manual page are front-ends for the function execve(2). (See the manual page for execve(2) for detailed information about the replacement of the current process.) The initial argument for these functions is the pathname of a file which is to be executed.
The "const char *arg" and subsequent ellipses in the execl, execlp, and execle functions can be thought of as arg0, arg1, ..., argn. Together they describe a list of one or more pointers to null-terminated strings that represent the argument list available to the executed program. The first argument, by convention, should point to the file name associated with the file being executed. The list of arguments must be terminated by a NULL pointer.
The exect, execv, execvp, and execvP functions provide an array of pointers to null-terminated strings that represent the argument list available to the new program. The first argument, by convention, should point to the file name associated with the file being executed. The array of pointers must be terminated by a NULL pointer.
The execle and exect functions also specify the environment of the executed process by following the NULL pointer that terminates the list of arguments in the argument list or the pointer to the argv array with an additional argument. This additional argument is an array of pointers to null-terminated strings and must be terminated by a NULL pointer. The other functions take the environment for the new process image from the external variable environ in the current process.
Some of these functions have special semantics.
The functions execlp, execvp, and execvP will duplicate the actions of the shell in searching for an executable file if the specified file name does not contain a slash "/" character. For execlp and execvp, search path is the path specified in the environment by "PATH" variable. If this variable is not specified, the default path is set according to the _PATH_DEFPATH definition in
.In paths.h , which is set to "/usr/bin:/bin". For execvP, the search path is specified as an argument to the function. In addition, certain errors are treated specially.
If an error is ambiguous (for simplicity, we shall consider all errors except ENOEXEC as being ambiguous here, although only the critical error EACCES is really ambiguous), then these functions will act as if they stat the file to determine whether the file exists and has suitable execute permissions. If it does, they will return immediately with the global variable errno restored to the value set by execve. Otherwise, the search will be continued. If the search completes without performing a successful execve or terminating due to an error, these functions will return with the global variable errno set to EACCES or ENOENT according to whether at least one file with suitable execute permissions was found.
If the header of a file is not recognized (the attempted execve returned ENOEXEC), these functions will execute the shell with the path of the file as its first argument. (If this attempt fails, no further searching is done.)
The function exect executes a file with the program tracing facilities enabled (see ptrace(2)).
RETURN VALUES
If any of the exec functions returns, an error will have occurred. The return value is -1, and the global variable errno will be set to indicate the error.
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