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- // Package pidfile provides structure and helper functions to create and remove
- // PID file. A PID file is usually a file used to store the process ID of a
- // running process.
- package pidfile // import "github.com/docker/docker/pkg/pidfile"
- import (
- "bytes"
- "fmt"
- "os"
- "strconv"
- "github.com/docker/docker/pkg/process"
- )
- // Read reads the "PID file" at path, and returns the PID if it contains a
- // valid PID of a running process, or 0 otherwise. It returns an error when
- // failing to read the file, or if the file doesn't exist, but malformed content
- // is ignored. Consumers should therefore check if the returned PID is a non-zero
- // value before use.
- func Read(path string) (pid int, err error) {
- pidByte, err := os.ReadFile(path)
- if err != nil {
- return 0, err
- }
- pid, err = strconv.Atoi(string(bytes.TrimSpace(pidByte)))
- if err != nil {
- return 0, nil
- }
- if pid != 0 && process.Alive(pid) {
- return pid, nil
- }
- return 0, nil
- }
- // Write writes a "PID file" at the specified path. It returns an error if the
- // file exists and contains a valid PID of a running process, or when failing
- // to write the file.
- func Write(path string, pid int) error {
- if pid < 1 {
- // We might be running as PID 1 when running docker-in-docker,
- // but 0 or negative PIDs are not acceptable.
- return fmt.Errorf("invalid PID (%d): only positive PIDs are allowed", pid)
- }
- oldPID, err := Read(path)
- if err != nil && !os.IsNotExist(err) {
- return err
- }
- if oldPID != 0 {
- return fmt.Errorf("process with PID %d is still running", oldPID)
- }
- return os.WriteFile(path, []byte(strconv.Itoa(pid)), 0o644)
- }
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