.UC .TH VFORK 2 .SH NAME vfork \- spawn new process in a virtual memory efficient way .SH SYNOPSIS \fBvfork()\fR .SH DESCRIPTION .I Vfork can be used to create new processes without fully copying the address space of the old process, which is horrendously inefficient in a paged environment. It is useful when the purpose of .I fork (2) would have been to create a new system context for an .I exec. .I Vfork differs from fork in that the parent's memory and thread of control run in the child's system context till a call to .I exec (2) or an exit (either by a call to .I exit (2) or abnormally.) The parent's process slot is suspended while it runs in the child's. .I Vfork returns 0 in the child's context and (later) the pid of the child in the parents context. .PP .I Vfork can normally be used just like .I fork. It does not work, however, to return while running in the childs context from the procedure which called .I vfork since the eventual return from .I vfork would then return to a no longer existant stack frame. Be careful, also, to call .I _exit rather than .I exit if you can't .I exec, since .I exit will flush and close standard I/O channels, and thereby mess up the parent processes standard I/O data structures. (Even with .I fork it is wrong to call .I exit since buffered data would then be flushed twice.) .SH SEE ALSO fork(2), exec(2), wait(2), .SH DIAGNOSTICS Same as for fork. .SH BUGS Would be unnecessary if .I fork were implemented by a mechanism similar to copy-on-write. The current system does not support this mechanism, however, necessitating .I vfork.