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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T16:44:42+00:00 2026-05-10T16:44:42+00:00

On Linux/NPTL , threads are created as some kind of process. I can see

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On Linux/NPTL, threads are created as some kind of process.

I can see some of my process have a weird cmdline:

cat /proc/5590/cmdline  hald-addon-storage: polling /dev/scd0 (every 2 sec) 

Do you have an idea how I could do that for each thread of my process? That would be very helpful for debugging.

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  1. 2026-05-10T16:44:42+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 4:44 pm

    If you want to do this in a portable way, something that will work across multiple Unix variations, there are very few options available.

    What you have to do is that your caller process must call exec with the argv [0] argument pointing to the name that you would like to see in the process output, and the filename pointing to the actual executable.

    You can try this behavior from the shell by using:

    exec -a 'This is my cute name' bash 

    That will replace the current bash process with one named 'This is my cute name'.

    For doing this in C, you can look at the source code of sendmail or any other piece of software that has been ported extensively and find all the variations that are needed across operating systems to support this.

    Some operating systems have a setproctitle(3) API, some others allow you to override the contents of argv [0] and show that result.

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