NAME

Perl::AfterFork - reinitializes Perl's notion of $$ and getppid()

SYNOPSIS

use Perl::AfterFork;
&Perl::AfterFork::reinit_pid;
&Perl::AfterFork::reinit_ppid;
&Perl::AfterFork::reinit_pidstatus;
&Perl::AfterFork::reinit;

DESCRIPTION

Using Perl's fork() command or your libc's fork() function or even your operating system's fork syscall does not do the same thing.

Since a process' PID does not change during it's life time Perl caches the result of the getpid syscall using the once fetched PID each time $$ is used. Hence after a successful fork() the internal PID-cache must be invalidated. The same argument is valid for glibc. It caches the getpid(2) as well.

As for getppid(2), Perl is even caching that. In my opinion Perl is doing wrong when caching the getppid(2) result at all since it can change without further notice when the parent process dies.

Further Perl maintains an internal cache of spawned children for it's waitpid implementation.

All these cached information can be reinitialized with this module.

reinit_pid

reinitializes the PID-cache

reinit_ppid

reinitializes the PPID-cache

reinit_pidstatus

reinitializes the waitpid-cache

reinit

reinitializes all 3 at once

EXPORT

Not an Exporter.

AUTHOR

Torsten Foertsch, <torsten.foertsch@gmx.net>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2005 by Torsten Foertsch

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.5 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.