[9] | 1 | .\" Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California.
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| 2 | .\" All rights reserved. The Berkeley software License Agreement
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| 3 | .\" specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution.
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| 4 | .\"
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| 5 | .\" @(#)execve.2 6.7 (Berkeley) 5/22/86
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| 6 | .\"
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| 7 | .TH EXECVE 2 "May 22, 1986"
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| 8 | .UC 4
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| 9 | .SH NAME
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| 10 | execve \- execute a file
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| 11 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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| 12 | .nf
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| 13 | .ft B
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| 14 | #include <unistd.h>
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| 15 |
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| 16 | int execve(const char *\fIname\fP, char *const \fIargv\fP[], char *const \fIenvp\fP[])
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| 17 | .ft R
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| 18 | .fi
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| 19 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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| 20 | .B Execve
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| 21 | transforms the calling process into a new process.
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| 22 | The new process is constructed from an ordinary file
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| 23 | called the \fInew process file\fP.
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| 24 | This file is either an executable object file,
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| 25 | or a file of data for an interpreter.
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| 26 | An executable object file consists of an identifying header,
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| 27 | followed by pages of data representing the initial program (text)
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| 28 | and initialized data pages. Additional pages may be specified
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| 29 | by the header to be initialized with zero data. See
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| 30 | .BR a.out (5).
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| 31 | .PP
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| 32 | An interpreter file begins with a line of the form ``#! \fIinterpreter\fP''.
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| 33 | When an interpreter file is
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| 34 | .BR execve\| 'd,
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| 35 | the system \fBexecve\fP\|'s the specified \fIinterpreter\fP, giving
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| 36 | it the name of the originally exec'd file as an argument and
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| 37 | shifting over the rest of the original arguments.
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| 38 | .PP
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| 39 | There can be no return from a successful \fBexecve\fP because the calling
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| 40 | core image is lost.
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| 41 | This is the mechanism whereby different process images become active.
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| 42 | .PP
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| 43 | The argument \fIargv\fP is a null-terminated array of character pointers
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| 44 | to null-terminated character strings. These strings constitute
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| 45 | the argument list to be made available to the new
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| 46 | process. By convention, at least one argument must be present in
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| 47 | this array, and the first element of this array should be
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| 48 | the name of the executed program (i.e., the last component of \fIname\fP).
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| 49 | .PP
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| 50 | The argument \fIenvp\fP is also a null-terminated array of character pointers
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| 51 | to null-terminated strings. These strings pass information to the
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| 52 | new process that is not directly an argument to the command (see
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| 53 | .BR environ (7)).
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| 54 | .PP
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| 55 | Descriptors open in the calling process remain open in
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| 56 | the new process, except for those for which the close-on-exec
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| 57 | flag is set (see
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| 58 | .BR close (2)).
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| 59 | Descriptors that remain open are unaffected by
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| 60 | .BR execve .
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| 61 | .PP
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| 62 | Ignored signals remain ignored across an
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| 63 | .BR execve ,
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| 64 | but signals that are caught are reset to their default values.
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| 65 | Blocked signals remain blocked regardless of changes to the signal action.
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| 66 | The signal stack is reset to be undefined (see
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| 67 | .BR sigaction (2)
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| 68 | for more information).
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| 69 | .PP
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| 70 | Each process has
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| 71 | .I real
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| 72 | user and group IDs and an
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| 73 | .I effective
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| 74 | user and group IDs. The
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| 75 | .I real
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| 76 | ID identifies the person using the system; the
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| 77 | .I effective
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| 78 | ID determines his access privileges.
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| 79 | .B Execve
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| 80 | changes the effective user and group ID to
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| 81 | the owner of the executed file if the file has the \*(lqset-user-ID\*(rq
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| 82 | or \*(lqset-group-ID\*(rq modes. The
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| 83 | .I real
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| 84 | user ID is not affected.
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| 85 | .PP
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| 86 | The new process also inherits the following attributes from
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| 87 | the calling process:
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| 88 | .PP
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| 89 | .in +5n
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| 90 | .nf
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| 91 | .ta +2i
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| 92 | process ID see \fBgetpid\fP\|(2)
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| 93 | parent process ID see \fBgetppid\fP\|(2)
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| 94 | process group ID see \fBgetpgrp\fP\|(2)
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| 95 | access groups see \fBgetgroups\fP\|(2)
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| 96 | working directory see \fBchdir\fP\|(2)
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| 97 | root directory see \fBchroot\fP\|(2)
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| 98 | control terminal see \fBtty\fP\|(4)
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| 99 | alarm timer see \fBalarm\fP\|(2)
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| 100 | file mode mask see \fBumask\fP\|(2)
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| 101 | signal mask see \fBsigaction\fP\|(2), \fBsigprocmask\fP\|(2)
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| 102 | .in -5n
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| 103 | .fi
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| 104 | .PP
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| 105 | When the executed program begins, it is called as follows:
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| 106 | .PP
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| 107 | .RS
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| 108 | .ft B
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| 109 | .nf
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| 110 | int main(int \fIargc\fP, char *const \fIargv\fP[], char *const \fIenvp\fP[]);
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| 111 |
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| 112 | exit(main(\fIargc\fP, \fIargv\fP, \fIenvp\fP));
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| 113 | .fi
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| 114 | .ft R
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| 115 | .RE
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| 116 | .PP
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| 117 | where
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| 118 | .I argc
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| 119 | is the number of elements in \fIargv\fP
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| 120 | (the ``arg count'')
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| 121 | and
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| 122 | .I argv
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| 123 | is the array of character pointers
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| 124 | to the arguments themselves.
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| 125 | .PP
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| 126 | .I Envp
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| 127 | is a pointer to an array of strings that constitute
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| 128 | the
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| 129 | .I environment
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| 130 | of the process.
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| 131 | A pointer to this array is also stored in the global variable ``environ''.
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| 132 | Each string consists of a name, an \*(lq=\*(rq, and a null-terminated value.
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| 133 | The array of pointers is terminated by a null pointer.
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| 134 | The shell
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| 135 | .BR sh (1)
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| 136 | passes an environment entry for each global shell variable
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| 137 | defined when the program is called.
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| 138 | See
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| 139 | .BR environ (7)
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| 140 | for some conventionally
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| 141 | used names.
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| 142 | .SH "RETURN VALUE
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| 143 | If
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| 144 | .B execve
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| 145 | returns to the calling process an error has occurred; the
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| 146 | return value will be \-1 and the global variable
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| 147 | .B errno
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| 148 | will contain an error code.
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| 149 | .SH ERRORS
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| 150 | .B Execve
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| 151 | will fail and return to the calling process if one or more
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| 152 | of the following are true:
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| 153 | .TP 15
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| 154 | [ENOTDIR]
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| 155 | A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
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| 156 | .TP 15
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| 157 | [ENAMETOOLONG]
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| 158 | The path name exceeds PATH_MAX characters.
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| 159 | .TP 15
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| 160 | [ENOENT]
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| 161 | The new process file does not exist.
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| 162 | .TP 15
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| 163 | [ELOOP]
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| 164 | Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname.
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| 165 | (Minix-vmd)
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| 166 | .TP 15
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| 167 | [EACCES]
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| 168 | Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix.
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| 169 | .TP 15
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| 170 | [EACCES]
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| 171 | The new process file is not an ordinary file.
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| 172 | .TP 15
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| 173 | [EACCES]
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| 174 | The new process file mode denies execute permission.
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| 175 | .TP 15
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| 176 | [ENOEXEC]
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| 177 | The new process file has the appropriate access
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| 178 | permission, but has an invalid magic number in its header.
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| 179 | .TP 15
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| 180 | [ENOMEM]
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| 181 | The new process requires more (virtual) memory than
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| 182 | is currently available.
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| 183 | .TP 15
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| 184 | [E2BIG]
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| 185 | The number of bytes in the new process's argument list
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| 186 | is larger than the system-imposed limit ARG_MAX.
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| 187 | The limit in the system as released is 4096 bytes for
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| 188 | 16-bit MINIX 3, 16384 bytes for 32-bit Minix, and unlimited for Minix-vmd.
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| 189 | .TP 15
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| 190 | [EFAULT]
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| 191 | \fIPath\fP\|, \fIargv\fP\|, or \fIenvp\fP point
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| 192 | to an illegal address.
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| 193 | .TP 15
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| 194 | [EIO]
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| 195 | An I/O error occurred while reading from the file system.
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| 196 | .SH CAVEATS
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| 197 | If a program is
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| 198 | .I setuid
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| 199 | to a non-super-user, but is executed when
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| 200 | the real \fBuid\fP is ``root'', then the program has some of the powers
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| 201 | of a super-user as well.
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| 202 | .SH "SEE ALSO"
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| 203 | .BR exit (2),
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| 204 | .BR fork (2),
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| 205 | .BR execl (3),
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| 206 | .BR environ (7).
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