return pid;
}
-/*
- * This function forks a child which calls child_main(). First,
+/* This function forks a child which calls child_main(). First,
* however, it has to establish communication paths to and from the
* newborn child. It creates two socket pairs -- one for writing to
* the child (from the parent) and one for reading from the child
* two socket ends are retained for reading and writing. In the
* child, the STDIN and STDOUT file descriptors refer to these
* sockets. In the parent, the function arguments f_in and f_out are
- * set to refer to these sockets.
- */
+ * set to refer to these sockets. */
pid_t local_child(int argc, char **argv, int *f_in, int *f_out,
int (*child_main)(int, char*[]))
{
exit_cleanup(RERR_IPC);
}
- /* For read-batch, don't even fork. */
pid = do_fork();
-
if (pid == -1) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "fork");
exit_cleanup(RERR_IPC);