exec(3) — Linux manual page

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | ERRORS | ATTRIBUTES | VERSIONS | STANDARDS | HISTORY | BUGS | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

exec(3) Library Functions Manual exec(3)

NAME top

 execl, execlp, execle, execv, execvp, execvpe - execute a file

LIBRARY top

 Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS top

 #include <unistd.h>
 extern char **environ;
 int execl(const char *path, const char *arg, ...
 /*, (char *) NULL */);
 int execlp(const char *file, const char *arg, ...
 /*, (char *) NULL */);
 int execle(const char *path, const char *arg, ...
 /*, (char *) NULL, char *const envp[] */);
 int execv(const char *path, char *const argv[]);
 int execvp(const char *file, char *const argv[]);
 int execvpe(const char *file, char *const argv[], char *const envp[]);
 Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see
 feature_test_macros(7)):
 execvpe():
 _GNU_SOURCE

DESCRIPTION top

 The exec() family of functions replaces the current process image
 with a new process image. The functions described in this manual
 page are layered on top of execve(2). (See the manual page for
 execve(2) for further details about the replacement of the current
 process image.)
 The initial argument for these functions is the name of a file
 that is to be executed.
 The functions can be grouped based on the letters following the
 "exec" prefix.
 l - execl(), execlp(), execle()
 The const char *arg and subsequent ellipses 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 filename associated
 with the file being executed. The list of arguments must be
 terminated by a null pointer, and, since these are variadic
 functions, this pointer must be cast (char *) NULL.
 By contrast with the 'l' functions, the 'v' functions (below)
 specify the command-line arguments of the executed program as a
 vector.
 v - execv(), execvp(), execvpe()
 The char *const argv[] argument is 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 filename associated with the file being executed. The
 array of pointers must be terminated by a null pointer.
 e - execle(), execvpe()
 The environment of the new process image is specified via the
 argument envp. The envp argument is an array of pointers to null-
 terminated strings and must be terminated by a null pointer.
 All other exec() functions (which do not include 'e' in the
 suffix) take the environment for the new process image from the
 external variable environ in the calling process.
 p - execlp(), execvp(), execvpe()
 These functions duplicate the actions of the shell in searching
 for an executable file if the specified filename does not contain
 a slash (/) character. The file is sought in the colon-separated
 list of directory pathnames specified in the PATH environment
 variable. If this variable isn't defined, the path list defaults
 to a list that includes the directories returned by
 confstr(_CS_PATH) (which typically returns the value
 "/bin:/usr/bin") and possibly also the current working directory;
 see VERSIONS for further details.
 execvpe() searches for the program using the value of PATH from
 the caller's environment, not from the envp argument.
 If the specified filename includes a slash character, then PATH is
 ignored, and the file at the specified pathname is executed.
 In addition, certain errors are treated specially.
 If permission is denied for a file (the attempted execve(2) failed
 with the error EACCES), these functions will continue searching
 the rest of the search path. If no other file is found, however,
 they will return with errno  set to EACCES.
 If the header of a file isn't recognized (the attempted execve(2)
 failed with the error ENOEXEC), these functions will execute the
 shell (/bin/sh) with the path of the file as its first argument.
 (If this attempt fails, no further searching is done.)
 All other exec() functions (which do not include 'p' in the
 suffix) take as their first argument a (relative or absolute)
 pathname that identifies the program to be executed.

RETURN VALUE top

 The exec() functions return only if an error has occurred. The
 return value is -1, and errno  is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS top

 All of these functions may fail and set errno  for any of the
 errors specified for execve(2).

ATTRIBUTES top

 For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
 attributes(7).
 ┌──────────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬─────────────┐
 │ Interface Attribute Value │
 ├──────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────────┤
 │ execl(), execle(), execv() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
 ├──────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────────┤
 │ execlp(), execvp(), execvpe() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe env │
 └──────────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴─────────────┘

VERSIONS top

 The default search path (used when the environment does not
 contain the variable PATH) shows some variation across systems.
 It generally includes /bin and /usr/bin (in that order) and may
 also include the current working directory. On some other
 systems, the current working is included after /bin and /usr/bin,
 as an anti-Trojan-horse measure. The glibc implementation long
 followed the traditional default where the current working
 directory is included at the start of the search path. However,
 some code refactoring during the development of glibc 2.24 caused
 the current working directory to be dropped altogether from the
 default search path. This accidental behavior change is
 considered mildly beneficial, and won't be reverted.
 The behavior of execlp() and execvp() when errors occur while
 attempting to execute the file is historic practice, but has not
 traditionally been documented and is not specified by the POSIX
 standard. BSD (and possibly other systems) do an automatic sleep
 and retry if ETXTBSY is encountered. Linux treats it as a hard
 error and returns immediately.
 Traditionally, the functions execlp() and execvp() ignored all
 errors except for the ones described above and ENOMEM and E2BIG,
 upon which they returned. They now return if any error other than
 the ones described above occurs.

STANDARDS top

 environ
 execl()
 execlp()
 execle()
 execv()
 execvp()
 POSIX.1-2008.
 execvpe()
 GNU.

HISTORY top

 environ
 execl()
 execlp()
 execle()
 execv()
 execvp()
 POSIX.1-2001.
 execvpe()
 glibc 2.11.

BUGS top

 Before glibc 2.24, execl() and execle() employed realloc(3)
 internally and were consequently not async-signal-safe, in
 violation of the requirements of POSIX.1. This was fixed in glibc
 2.24.
 Architecture-specific details
 On sparc and sparc64, execv() is provided as a system call by the
 kernel (with the prototype shown above) for compatibility with
 SunOS. This function is not employed by the execv() wrapper
 function on those architectures.

SEE ALSO top

 sh(1), execve(2), execveat(2), fork(2), ptrace(2), fexecve(3),
 system(3), environ(7)

COLOPHON top

 This page is part of the man-pages (Linux kernel and C library
 user-space interface documentation) project. Information about
 the project can be found at 
 ⟨https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/⟩. If you have a bug report
 for this manual page, see
 ⟨https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/man-pages/man-pages.git/tree/CONTRIBUTING⟩.
 This page was obtained from the tarball man-pages-6.15.tar.gz
 fetched from
 ⟨https://mirrors.edge.kernel.org/pub/linux/docs/man-pages/⟩ on
 2025年08月11日. If you discover any rendering problems in this HTML
 version of the page, or you believe there is a better or more up-
 to-date source for the page, or you have corrections or
 improvements to the information in this COLOPHON (which is not
 part of the original manual page), send a mail to
 man-pages@man7.org
Linux man-pages 6.15 2025年05月17日 exec(3)

Pages that refer to this page: pmlogger(1), watch(1), xargs(1), execve(2), getpid(2), ptrace(2), seccomp(2), statfs(2), vfork(2), atexit(3), clearenv(3), confstr(3), glob(3), ibv_fork_init(3), libexpect(3), lttng-ust(3), on_exit(3), pam_getenvlist(3), posix_spawn(3), statvfs(3), stdin(3), sysconf(3), system(3), systemd.exec(5), environ(7), signal-safety(7)



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