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EXECVE(2)                  Linux Programmer's Manual                 EXECVE(2)
NAME
       execve - execute program
SYNOPSIS
       #include <unistd.h>
       int execve(const char *filename, char *const argv[],
                  char *const envp[]);
DESCRIPTION
       execve() executes the program pointed to by filename.  filename must be
       either a binary executable, or a script starting with  a  line  of  the
       form:
           #! interpreter [optional-arg]
       For details of the latter case, see "Interpreter scripts" below.
       argv  is  an  array  of argument strings passed to the new program.  By
       convention, the first of these strings (i.e., argv[0])  should  contain
       the filename associated with the file being executed.  envp is an array
       of strings, conventionally of the form key=value, which are  passed  as
       environment  to  the  new  program.  The argv and envp arrays must each
       include a null pointer at the end of the array.
       The argument vector and environment  can  be  accessed  by  the  called
       program's main function, when it is defined as:
           int main(int argc, char *argv[], char *envp[])
       Note, however, that the use of a third argument to the main function is
       not specified in POSIX.1; according to POSIX.1, the environment  should
       be accessed via the external variable environ(7).
       execve()  does  not  return on success, and the text, initialized data,
       uninitialized  data  (bss),  and  stack  of  the  calling  process  are
       overwritten according to the contents of the newly loaded program.
       If the current program is being ptraced, a SIGTRAP signal is sent to it
       after a successful execve().
       If the set-user-ID bit is  set  on  the  program  file  pointed  to  by
       filename,  then the effective user ID of the calling process is changed
       to that of the owner of the program file.   Similarly,  when  the  set-
       group-ID  bit  of the program file is set the effective group ID of the
       calling process is set to the group of the program file.
       The  aforementioned  transformations  of  the  effective  IDs  are  not
       performed  (i.e., the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits are ignored) if
       any of the following is true:
       *  the no_new_privs attribute  is  set  for  the  calling  thread  (see
          prctl(2));
       *  the  underlying filesystem is mounted nosuid (the MS_NOSUID flag for
          mount(2)); or
       *  the calling process is being ptraced.
       The capabilities of the program file  (see  capabilities(7))  are  also
       ignored if any of the above are true.
       The  effective  user ID of the process is copied to the saved set-user-
       ID; similarly, the effective group ID is copied to the saved set-group-
       ID.  This copying takes place after any effective ID changes that occur
       because of the set-user-ID and set-group-ID mode bits.
       The process's real UID and real GID, as well  its  supplementary  group
       IDs, are unchanged by a call to execve().
       If  the  executable  is  an  a.out dynamically linked binary executable
       containing shared-library stubs, the Linux dynamic linker  ld.so(8)  is
       called  at  the  start of execution to bring needed shared objects into
       memory and link the executable with them.
       If  the  executable  is  a  dynamically  linked  ELF  executable,   the
       interpreter  named  in the PT_INTERP segment is used to load the needed
       shared objects.  This interpreter is typically  /lib/ld-linux.so.2  for
       binaries linked with glibc (see ld-linux.so(8)).
       All  process  attributes  are  preserved during an execve(), except the
       following:
       *  The dispositions of any signals that are being caught are  reset  to
          the default (signal(7)).
       *  Any alternate signal stack is not preserved (sigaltstack(2)).
       *  Memory mappings are not preserved (mmap(2)).
       *  Attached System V shared memory segments are detached (shmat(2)).
       *  POSIX shared memory regions are unmapped (shm_open(3)).
       *  Open POSIX message queue descriptors are closed (mq_overview(7)).
       *  Any open POSIX named semaphores are closed (sem_overview(7)).
       *  POSIX timers are not preserved (timer_create(2)).
       *  Any open directory streams are closed (opendir(3)).
       *  Memory locks are not preserved (mlock(2), mlockall(2)).
       *  Exit handlers are not preserved (atexit(3), on_exit(3)).
       *  The   floating-point  environment  is  reset  to  the  default  (see
          fenv(3)).
       The process attributes in the  preceding  list  are  all  specified  in
       POSIX.1.   The following Linux-specific process attributes are also not
       preserved during an execve():
       *  The prctl(2) PR_SET_DUMPABLE flag is set, unless  a  set-user-ID  or
          set-group ID program is being executed, in which case it is cleared.
       *  The prctl(2) PR_SET_KEEPCAPS flag is cleared.
       *  (Since  Linux  2.4.36  /  2.6.23)  If  a set-user-ID or set-group-ID
          program is being executed, then  the  parent  death  signal  set  by
          prctl(2) PR_SET_PDEATHSIG flag is cleared.
       *  The  process  name, as set by prctl(2) PR_SET_NAME (and displayed by
          ps -o comm), is reset to the name of the new executable file.
       *  The   SECBIT_KEEP_CAPS   securebits   flag    is    cleared.     See
          capabilities(7).
       *  The termination signal is reset to SIGCHLD (see clone(2)).
       *  The  file  descriptor  table  is unshared, undoing the effect of the
          CLONE_FILES flag of clone(2).
       Note the following further points:
       *  All threads other than the calling thread are  destroyed  during  an
          execve().   Mutexes, condition variables, and other pthreads objects
          are not preserved.
       *  The equivalent of setlocale(LC_ALL,  "C")  is  executed  at  program
          start-up.
       *  POSIX.1  specifies  that  the  dispositions  of any signals that are
          ignored or set to the default are left unchanged.  POSIX.1 specifies
          one  exception:  if SIGCHLD is being ignored, then an implementation
          may leave the disposition unchanged or  reset  it  to  the  default;
          Linux does the former.
       *  Any   outstanding   asynchronous   I/O   operations   are   canceled
          (aio_read(3), aio_write(3)).
       *  For   the   handling   of   capabilities   during   execve(),    see
          capabilities(7).
       *  By  default,  file descriptors remain open across an execve().  File
          descriptors that  are  marked  close-on-exec  are  closed;  see  the
          description  of  FD_CLOEXEC  in  fcntl(2).  (If a file descriptor is
          closed, this will cause the release of all record locks obtained  on
          the  underlying  file  by  this process.  See fcntl(2) for details.)
          POSIX.1 says that if file descriptors 0, 1, and 2 would otherwise be
          closed  after  a  successful  execve(),  and  the process would gain
          privilege because the set-user-ID or set-group_ID mode bit  was  set
          on  the  executed file, then the system may open an unspecified file
          for each of these file descriptors.   As  a  general  principle,  no
          portable  program,  whether privileged or not, can assume that these
          three file descriptors will remain closed across an execve().
   Interpreter scripts
       An interpreter script is  a  text  file  that  has  execute  permission
       enabled and whose first line is of the form:
           #! interpreter [optional-arg]
       The  interpreter  must  be a valid pathname for an executable file.  If
       the filename argument of execve() specifies an interpreter script, then
       interpreter will be invoked with the following arguments:
           interpreter [optional-arg] filename arg...
       where arg...  is the series of words pointed to by the argv argument of
       execve(), starting at argv[1].
       For portable use, optional-arg should either be absent, or be specified
       as  a  single word (i.e., it should not contain white space); see NOTES
       below.
       Since Linux 2.6.28, the kernel permits the interpreter of a  script  to
       itself  be  a  script.   This permission is recursive, up to a limit of
       four recursions, so that the interpreter  may  be  a  script  which  is
       interpreted by a script, and so on.
   Limits on size of arguments and environment
       Most  UNIX  implementations  impose some limit on the total size of the
       command-line argument (argv) and environment (envp) strings that may be
       passed to a new program.  POSIX.1 allows an implementation to advertise
       this limit using the ARG_MAX constant (either defined in <limits.h>  or
       available at run time using the call sysconf(_SC_ARG_MAX)).
       On  Linux  prior  to  kernel  2.6.23,  the  memory  used  to  store the
       environment and argument strings was limited to 32  pages  (defined  by
       the  kernel constant MAX_ARG_PAGES).  On architectures with a 4-kB page
       size, this yields a maximum size of 128 kB.
       On kernel 2.6.23 and later, most architectures  support  a  size  limit
       derived  from  the  soft RLIMIT_STACK resource limit (see getrlimit(2))
       that is in force at the time of the execve() call.  (Architectures with
       no  memory  management  unit are excepted: they maintain the limit that
       was in effect before kernel 2.6.23.)  This change  allows  programs  to
       have  a  much  larger  argument  and/or  environment  list.   For these
       architectures, the total size is limited to 1/4 of  the  allowed  stack
       size.   (Imposing the 1/4-limit ensures that the new program always has
       some stack space.)  Since Linux 2.6.25, the kernel places a floor of 32
       pages  on  this size limit, so that, even when RLIMIT_STACK is set very
       low, applications are guaranteed to have at least as much argument  and
       environment  space  as was provided by Linux 2.6.23 and earlier.  (This
       guarantee was not provided in Linux 2.6.23 and 2.6.24.)   Additionally,
       the  limit per string is 32 pages (the kernel constant MAX_ARG_STRLEN),
       and the maximum number of strings is 0x7FFFFFFF.
RETURN VALUE
       On success, execve() does not return, on  error  -1  is  returned,  and
       errno is set appropriately.
ERRORS
       E2BIG  The total number of bytes in the environment (envp) and argument
              list (argv) is too large.
       EACCES Search permission is denied on a component of the path prefix of
              filename  or  the  name  of  a  script  interpreter.   (See also
              path_resolution(7).)
       EACCES The file or a script interpreter is not a regular file.
       EACCES Execute permission is denied for the file or  a  script  or  ELF
              interpreter.
       EACCES The filesystem is mounted noexec.
       EAGAIN (since Linux 3.1)
              Having  changed  its  real UID using one of the set*uid() calls,
              the  caller  was--and  is  now  still--above  its   RLIMIT_NPROC
              resource   limit   (see  setrlimit(2)).   For  a  more  detailed
              explanation of this error, see NOTES.
       EFAULT filename or one of the pointers in  the  vectors  argv  or  envp
              points outside your accessible address space.
       EINVAL An  ELF  executable  had  more than one PT_INTERP segment (i.e.,
              tried to name more than one interpreter).
       EIO    An I/O error occurred.
       EISDIR An ELF interpreter was a directory.
       ELIBBAD
              An ELF interpreter was not in a recognized format.
       ELOOP  Too many symbolic links were encountered in  resolving  filename
              or the name of a script or ELF interpreter.
       ELOOP  The  maximum recursion limit was reached during recursive script
              interpretation (see "Interpreter scripts", above).  Before Linux
              3.8, the error produced for this case was ENOEXEC.
       EMFILE The per-process limit on the number of open file descriptors has
              been reached.
       ENAMETOOLONG
              filename is too long.
       ENFILE The system-wide limit on the total number of open files has been
              reached.
       ENOENT The file filename or a script or ELF interpreter does not exist,
              or a shared library needed for the file or interpreter cannot be
              found.
       ENOEXEC
              An  executable  is  not in a recognized format, is for the wrong
              architecture, or has some  other  format  error  that  means  it
              cannot be executed.
       ENOMEM Insufficient kernel memory was available.
       ENOTDIR
              A  component  of  the path prefix of filename or a script or ELF
              interpreter is not a directory.
       EPERM  The filesystem is mounted nosuid, the user is not the superuser,
              and the file has the set-user-ID or set-group-ID bit set.
       EPERM  The  process  is being traced, the user is not the superuser and
              the file has the set-user-ID or set-group-ID bit set.
       EPERM  A "capability-dumb" applications would not obtain the  full  set
              of  permitted  capabilities granted by the executable file.  See
              capabilities(7).
       ETXTBSY
              The specified executable was open for writing  by  one  or  more
              processes.
CONFORMING TO
       POSIX.1-2001,  POSIX.1-2008, SVr4, 4.3BSD.  POSIX does not document the
       #! behavior, but  it  exists  (with  some  variations)  on  other  UNIX
       systems.
NOTES
       Set-user-ID and set-group-ID processes can not be ptrace(2)d.
       The  result  of mounting a filesystem nosuid varies across Linux kernel
       versions: some will refuse execution of  set-user-ID  and  set-group-ID
       executables  when  this  would  give  the  user powers she did not have
       already (and return EPERM), some will just ignore the  set-user-ID  and
       set-group-ID bits and exec() successfully.
       On  Linux, argv and envp can be specified as NULL.  In both cases, this
       has the same effect as specifying the argument as a pointer to  a  list
       containing  a  single  null  pointer.   Do  not  take advantage of this
       nonstandard and nonportable misfeature!  On many  other  UNIX  systems,
       specifying  argv  as NULL will result in an error (EFAULT).  Some other
       UNIX systems treat the envp==NULL case the same as Linux.
       POSIX.1 says that values returned by  sysconf(3)  should  be  invariant
       over  the  lifetime  of a process.  However, since Linux 2.6.23, if the
       RLIMIT_STACK  resource  limit  changes,  then  the  value  reported  by
       _SC_ARG_MAX  will  also  change,  to reflect the fact that the limit on
       space for holding command-line arguments and environment variables  has
       changed.
       In  most  cases  where  execve() fails, control returns to the original
       executable image, and the caller of execve() can then handle the error.
       However,  in  (rare)  cases  (typically caused by resource exhaustion),
       failure may occur past the point of no return: the original  executable
       image  has  been  torn  down, but the new image could not be completely
       built.  In such cases, the kernel kills  the  process  with  a  SIGSEGV
       (SIGKILL until Linux 3.17) signal.
   Interpreter scripts
       A  maximum  line length of 127 characters is allowed for the first line
       in an interpreter script.
       The semantics of the optional-arg argument  of  an  interpreter  script
       vary across implementations.  On Linux, the entire string following the
       interpreter name is passed as a single argument to the interpreter, and
       this string can include white space.  However, behavior differs on some
       other systems.  Some systems use the first  white  space  to  terminate
       optional-arg.  On some systems, an interpreter script can have multiple
       arguments, and white spaces in optional-arg are  used  to  delimit  the
       arguments.
       Linux ignores the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits on scripts.
   execve() and EAGAIN
       A  more  detailed explanation of the EAGAIN error that can occur (since
       Linux 3.1) when calling execve() is as follows.
       The EAGAIN  error  can  occur  when  a  preceding  call  to  setuid(2),
       setreuid(2),  or setresuid(2) caused the real user ID of the process to
       change, and that change caused the process to exceed  its  RLIMIT_NPROC
       resource limit (i.e., the number of processes belonging to the new real
       UID exceeds the resource limit).  From Linux 2.6.0 to 3.0, this  caused
       the  set*uid() call to fail.  (Prior to 2.6, the resource limit was not
       imposed on processes that changed their user IDs.)
       Since Linux 3.1, the scenario  just  described  no  longer  causes  the
       set*uid()  call  to  fail,  because  it too often led to security holes
       where buggy applications didn't check the  return  status  and  assumed
       that--if the caller had root privileges--the call would always succeed.
       Instead, the set*uid() calls now successfully change the real UID,  but
       the kernel sets an internal flag, named PF_NPROC_EXCEEDED, to note that
       the  RLIMIT_NPROC  resource  limit   has   been   exceeded.    If   the
       PF_NPROC_EXCEEDED  flag is set and the resource limit is still exceeded
       at the time of a subsequent execve() call, that  call  fails  with  the
       error EAGAIN.  This kernel logic ensures that the RLIMIT_NPROC resource
       limit is still enforced for the  common  privileged  daemon  workflow--
       namely, fork(2) + set*uid() + execve().
       If  the  resource  limit  was  not  still  exceeded  at the time of the
       execve() call (because other  processes  belonging  to  this  real  UID
       terminated  between the set*uid() call and the execve() call), then the
       execve() call succeeds and  the  kernel  clears  the  PF_NPROC_EXCEEDED
       process flag.  The flag is also cleared if a subsequent call to fork(2)
       by this process succeeds.
   Historical
       With UNIX V6, the argument list of an exec() call was ended by 0, while
       the  argument  list  of main was ended by -1.  Thus, this argument list
       was not directly usable in a further exec() call.  Since UNIX V7,  both
       are NULL.
EXAMPLE
       The  following  program  is designed to be execed by the second program
       below.  It just echoes its command-line arguments, one per line.
           /* myecho.c */
           #include <stdio.h>
           #include <stdlib.h>
           int
           main(int argc, char *argv[])
           {
               int j;
               for (j = 0; j < argc; j++)
                   printf("argv[%d]: %s\n", j, argv[j]);
               exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
           }
       This program can be used to exec the program named in its  command-line
       argument:
           /* execve.c */
           #include <stdio.h>
           #include <stdlib.h>
           #include <unistd.h>
           int
           main(int argc, char *argv[])
           {
               char *newargv[] = { NULL, "hello", "world", NULL };
               char *newenviron[] = { NULL };
               if (argc != 2) {
                   fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <file-to-exec>\n", argv[0]);
                   exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
               }
               newargv[0] = argv[1];
               execve(argv[1], newargv, newenviron);
               perror("execve");   /* execve() returns only on error */
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }
       We can use the second program to exec the first as follows:
           $ cc myecho.c -o myecho
           $ cc execve.c -o execve
           $ ./execve ./myecho
           argv[0]: ./myecho
           argv[1]: hello
           argv[2]: world
       We  can  also  use  these  programs  to demonstrate the use of a script
       interpreter.  To do this we create a script whose "interpreter" is  our
       myecho program:
           $ cat > script
           #!./myecho script-arg
           ^D
           $ chmod +x script
       We can then use our program to exec the script:
           $ ./execve ./script
           argv[0]: ./myecho
           argv[1]: script-arg
           argv[2]: ./script
           argv[3]: hello
           argv[4]: world
SEE ALSO
       chmod(2),    execveat(2),   fork(2),   get_robust_list(2),   ptrace(2),
       execl(3), fexecve(3), getopt(3), system(3), credentials(7), environ(7),
       path_resolution(7), ld.so(8)
COLOPHON
       This  page  is  part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
       description of the project, information about reporting bugs,  and  the
       latest     version     of     this    page,    can    be    found    at
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Linux                             2017-09-15                         EXECVE(2)