Is there a way to set argv[0]
in a Haskell program (say, one compiled with ghc)?
I found the getProgName
and withProgName
functions in System.Environment, but it doesn't seem to change what ps
reports (Ubuntu).
import System.Environment
main =
do name <- getProgName
putStrLn $ "Hello, my name is " ++ name
withProgName "other" $ do
newname <- getProgName
putStrLn $ "Name now set to " ++ newname
putStrLn "What is your name: "
-- allow time to run ps
ans <- getLine
putStrLn $ "Pleased to meet you, " ++ ans
There is no portable way of doing this, but on Linux 2.6.9 and up the process name can be changed with prctl()
using the PR_SET_NAME
operation, so we just need a little bit of FFI to use it from Haskell. (It's usually a good idea to check if there are any bindings on Hackage, but in this case I couldn't find any).
{-# LANGUAGE ForeignFunctionInterface #-}
import Foreign.C
foreign import ccall "sys/prctl.h prctl"
prctl :: CInt -> CString -> CULong -> CULong -> CULong -> IO CInt
setProgName :: String -> IO ()
setProgName title =
withCString title $ \title' -> do
res <- prctl pr_set_name title' 0 0 0
return ()
where pr_set_name = 15
This seems to work fine for changing the name as seen by ps
. However, the value returned by getProgName
appears to be cached when the program starts, so you'll have to combine this with withProgName
to see the change within your program.
The program name is fixed at the time the program starts, so any mechanism to change the reported program name will be OS-specific. As far as I know, there's no way to do this with the standard libraries, and a quick search of Hackage doesn't show anything up. I'm not sure there's any way to accomplish this with Linux in the first place, other than re-executing the same program with a different argv[0]
.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9503157/setting-argv0-in-haskell