Notice: This page requires JavaScript to function properly.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings or update your browser.
Impara File Descriptors and Standard Streams | Understanding Linux Daemons
Linux Daemons Fundamentals

bookFile Descriptors and Standard Streams

Linux daemons should not use the terminal for input or output. Every process starts with three file descriptors: stdin (0), stdout (1), and stderr (2). For interactive programs they point to the terminal, but for daemons this is unsafe and unreliable.

To avoid issues, a daemon must redirect these streams, typically sending stdin to /dev/null and stdout and stderr to /dev/null or a log file. This prevents accidental terminal access and enables proper logging and error handling.

main.c

main.c

copy

If you do not redirect the standard streams in a daemon, several problems can occur. Output sent to stdout or stderr may go to a terminal that no longer exists, causing errors or lost messages. In some cases, if the parent process closes its terminal, your daemon could receive a SIGHUP (hangup signal), potentially terminating it. Leaving stdin open may allow the daemon to block, waiting for input that will never come. By redirecting stdin to /dev/null, you ensure the daemon does not block on input. Redirecting stdout and stderr to a log file or /dev/null avoids polluting the terminal or losing important error messages. The C and Python code samples above show how to perform these redirections, ensuring your daemon behaves predictably and logs output in a controlled manner.

question mark

What is a likely consequence if a daemon process fails to redirect its standard output and error streams?

Select the correct answer

Tutto è chiaro?

Come possiamo migliorarlo?

Grazie per i tuoi commenti!

Sezione 1. Capitolo 3

Chieda ad AI

expand

Chieda ad AI

ChatGPT

Chieda pure quello che desidera o provi una delle domande suggerite per iniziare la nostra conversazione

bookFile Descriptors and Standard Streams

Scorri per mostrare il menu

Linux daemons should not use the terminal for input or output. Every process starts with three file descriptors: stdin (0), stdout (1), and stderr (2). For interactive programs they point to the terminal, but for daemons this is unsafe and unreliable.

To avoid issues, a daemon must redirect these streams, typically sending stdin to /dev/null and stdout and stderr to /dev/null or a log file. This prevents accidental terminal access and enables proper logging and error handling.

main.c

main.c

copy

If you do not redirect the standard streams in a daemon, several problems can occur. Output sent to stdout or stderr may go to a terminal that no longer exists, causing errors or lost messages. In some cases, if the parent process closes its terminal, your daemon could receive a SIGHUP (hangup signal), potentially terminating it. Leaving stdin open may allow the daemon to block, waiting for input that will never come. By redirecting stdin to /dev/null, you ensure the daemon does not block on input. Redirecting stdout and stderr to a log file or /dev/null avoids polluting the terminal or losing important error messages. The C and Python code samples above show how to perform these redirections, ensuring your daemon behaves predictably and logs output in a controlled manner.

question mark

What is a likely consequence if a daemon process fails to redirect its standard output and error streams?

Select the correct answer

Tutto è chiaro?

Come possiamo migliorarlo?

Grazie per i tuoi commenti!

Sezione 1. Capitolo 3
some-alt