Your program can arrange to run its own cleanup functions if normal
termination happens. If you are writing a library for use in various
application programs, then it is unreliable to insist that all
applications call the library's cleanup functions explicitly before
exiting. It is much more robust to make the cleanup invisible to the
application, by setting up a cleanup function in the library itself
using atexit
or on_exit
.
The
atexit
function registers the function function to be called at normal program termination. The function is called with no arguments.The return value from
atexit
is zero on success and nonzero if the function cannot be registered.
This function is a somewhat more powerful variant of
atexit
. It accepts two arguments, a function function and an arbitrary pointer arg. At normal program termination, the function is called with two arguments: the status value passed toexit
, and the arg.This function is included in the GNU C library only for compatibility for SunOS, and may not be supported by other implementations.
Here's a trivial program that illustrates the use of exit
and
atexit
:
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> void bye (void) { puts ("Goodbye, cruel world...."); } int main (void) { atexit (bye); exit (EXIT_SUCCESS); }
When this program is executed, it just prints the message and exits.