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Home/ Questions/Q 3610698
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T21:47:05+00:00 2026-05-18T21:47:05+00:00

Quick question about Ruby forking – I ran across a bit of forking code

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Quick question about Ruby forking – I ran across a bit of forking code in Resque earlier that was sexy as hell but tripped me up for a few.

I’m hoping for someone to give me a little more detail about what’s going on here. Specifically – it would appear that forking spawns a child (expected) and kicks it straight into the ‘else’ side of my condition (less expected. Is that expected behavior? A Ruby idiom?

My IRB hack here:

def fork
  return true if @cant_fork

  begin
    if Kernel.respond_to?(:fork)
      Kernel.fork
    else
      raise NotImplementedError
    end
  rescue NotImplementedError
    @cant_fork = true
    nil
  end
end

def do_something
  puts "Starting do_something"

  if foo = fork
    puts "we are forking from #{Process.pid}"
    Process.wait
  else
    puts "no need to fork, let's get to work: #{Process.pid} under #{Process.ppid}"
    puts "doing it"
  end
end

do_something
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T21:47:06+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 9:47 pm

    This is how fork works. From the documentation:

    Otherwise, the fork call returns
    twice, once in the parent, returning
    the process ID of the child, and once
    in the child, returning nil.

    So, in your parent ‘foo = fork’ is the PID of the child, and in the child ‘foo = fork’ is nil, thus it takes the ‘else’ branch in the child.

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