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(BSD System Compatibility)

signal(3bsd)


signal -- (BSD) simplified software signal facilities

Synopsis

   /usr/ucb/cc [flag . . . ] file . . .
   

#include <signal.h>

void (*signal(int sig, void *func))();

Description

signal is a simplified interface to the more general sigvec(3bsd) facility. Programs that use signal in preference to sigvec are more likely to be portable to all systems.

A signal is generated by some abnormal event, initiated by a user at a terminal (quit, interrupt, stop), by a program error (bus error, and so on), by request of another program (kill), or when a process is stopped because it wishes to access its control terminal while in the background (see termio(7)). Signals are optionally generated when a process resumes after being stopped, when the status of child processes changes, or when input is ready at the control terminal. Most signals cause termination of the receiving process if no action is taken; some signals instead cause the process receiving them to be stopped, or are simply discarded if the process has not requested otherwise. Except for the SIGKILL and SIGSTOP signals, the signal call allows signals either to be ignored or to interrupt to a specified location. The following is a list of all signals with names as in the include file signal.h:

SIGHUP   hangup
SIGINT   interrupt
SIGQUIT * quit
SIGILL * illegal instruction
SIGTRAP * trace trap
SIGABRT * abort (generated by abort(3C) routine)
SIGEMT * emulator trap
SIGFPE * arithmetic exception
SIGKILL   kill (cannot be caught, blocked, or ignored)
SIGBUS * bus error
SIGSEGV * segmentation violation
SIGSYS * bad argument to system call
SIGPIPE   write on a pipe or other socket with no one to read it
SIGALRM   alarm clock
SIGTERM   software termination signal
SIGURG BULLET urgent condition present on socket
SIGSTOP + stop (cannot be caught, blocked, or ignored)
SIGTSTP + stop signal generated from keyboard
SIGCONT BULLET continue after stop (cannot be blocked)
SIGCHLD BULLET child status has changed
SIGTTIN + background read attempted from control terminal
SIGTTOU + background write attempted to control terminal
SIGIO BULLET I/O is possible on a descriptor (see fcntl(2))
SIGPWR BULLET power fail/restart
SIGXCPU * cpu time limit exceeded (see getrlimit(2))
SIGXFSZ * file size limit exceeded (see
getrlimit(2))    
SIGVTALRM   virtual time alarm (see getitimer(3C))
SIGPROF   profiling timer alarm (see getitimer(3C))
SIGWINCH BULLET window changed (see termio(7))
SIGUSR1   user-defined signal 1
SIGUSR2   user-defined signal 2

 SIGHUP          hangup
 SIGINT          interrupt
 SIGQUIT     *   quit
 SIGILL      *   illegal instruction
 SIGTRAP     *   trace trap
 SIGABRT     *   abort (generated by
                 abort(3C) routine)
 SIGEMT      *   emulator trap
 SIGFPE      *   arithmetic
                 exception
 SIGKILL         kill (cannot be
                 caught, blocked, or
                 ignored)
 SIGBUS      *   bus error
 SIGSEGV     *   segmentation
                 violation
 SIGSYS      *   bad argument to
                 system call
 SIGPIPE         write on a pipe or
                 other socket with
                 no one to read it
 SIGALRM         alarm clock
 SIGTERM         software
                 termination signal
 SIGURG          urgent condition
                 present on socket
 SIGSTOP         stop (cannot be
                 caught, blocked, or
                 ignored)
 SIGTSTP         stop signal
                 generated from
                 keyboard
 SIGCONT         continue after stop
                 (cannot be blocked)
 SIGCHLD         child status has
                 changed
 SIGTTIN         background read
                 attempted from
                 control terminal
 SIGTTOU         background write
                 attempted to
                 control terminal
 SIGIO           I/O is possible on
                 a descriptor (see
                 fcntl(2)
 SIGPWR          power fail/restart
 SIGXCPU     *   cpu time limit
                 exceeded (see
                 getrlimit(2)
 SIGXFSZ     *   file size limit
                 exceeded (see
 getrlimit(2)
 SIGVTALRM       virtual time alarm
                 (see getitimer(3C)
 SIGPROF         profiling timer
                 alarm (see
                 getitimer(3C)
 SIGWINCH        window changed (see
                 termio(7)
 SIGUSR1         user-defined signal
                 1
 SIGUSR2         user-defined signal
                 2

The starred signals in the list above cause a core image if not caught or ignored.

If func is SIG_DFL, the default action for signal sig is reinstated; this default is termination (with a core image for starred signals) except for signals marked with BULLET or +. Signals marked with BULLET are discarded if the action is SIG_DFL; signals marked with + cause the process to stop. If func is SIG_IGN the signal is subsequently ignored and pending instances of the signal are discarded. Otherwise, when the signal occurs further occurrences of the signal are automatically blocked and func is called.

A return from the function unblocks the handled signal and continues the process at the point it was interrupted.

If a caught signal occurs during certain system calls, terminating the call prematurely, the call is automatically restarted. In particular this can occur during a read(2) or write(2) on a slow device (such as a terminal; but not a file) and during a wait(2).

The value of signal is the previous (or initial) value of func for the particular signal.

After a fork(2) or vfork(2) the child inherits all signals. An execve (see exec(2)) resets all caught signals to the default action; ignored signals remain ignored.

Return values

The previous action is returned on a successful call. Otherwise, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.

signal will fail and no action will take place if one of the following occur:


EINVAL
sig is not a valid signal number, or is SIGKILL or SIGSTOP.

References

exec(2), fork(2), getitimer(3C), getrlimit(2), kill(1), kill(2), ptrace(2), read(2), setjmp(3bsd), setjmp(3C), sigaction(2), sigblock(3bsd), sigpause(3bsd), sigsetmask(3bsd), sigstack(3bsd), sigvec(3bsd), termio(7), wait(2), wait(3bsd), write(2)

Notices

The handler routine can be declared:
   void handler(sig, code, scp, addr)
   int sig, code;
   struct sigcontext *scp;
   char *addr;

Here sig is the signal number; code is a parameter of certain signals that provides additional detail; scp is a pointer to the sigcontext structure (defined in signal.h), used to restore the context from before the signal; and addr is additional address information. See sigvec(3bsd) for more details.


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UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004