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kill(1)

kill(2)

sigvec(2)

sigblock(2)

sigsetmask(2)

sigpause(2)

sigstack(2)

setjmp(3)

tty(4)

SIGNAL(3C)

NAME

signal − simplified software signal facilities

USAGE

#include <signal.h>
 
(*signal(sig, func))() void (*func)();

DESCRIPTION

Signal is a simplified interface to the more general sigvec(2) facility. 

A signal is generated by some abnormal event, initiated by a user at a terminal (quit, interrupt, stop), by a program error (bus error, etc.), 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 tty(4)).  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.  The SIGKILL and SIGSTOP signals cannot be caught or ignored.  Signal allows all other signals to be ignored, or to generate an interrupt to a specified location.  The following is a list of all signals with names as in the include file <signal.h>:

SIGHUP1hang-up
SIGINT2interrupt
SIGQUIT3quit
SIGILL4illegal instruction
SIGTRAP5trace trap
SIGIOT6IOT instruction
SIGEMT7EMT instruction
SIGFPE8floating-point exception
SIGKILL9kill (cannot be caught, blocked, or ignored)
SIGBUS10bus error
SIGSEGV11segmentation violation
SIGSYS12bad argument to system call
SIGPIPE13write on a pipe with no one to read it
SIGALRM14alarm clock
SIGTERM15software termination signal
SIGUSR116user-defined signal 1
SIGUSR217user-defined signal 2
SIGCLD18death of a child
SIGAPOLLO19DOMAIN System fault with no UNIX equivalent
SIGSTOP20†stop, cannot be caught, held, or ignored
SIGTSTP21†stop signal generated from keyboard
SIGCONT22•continue after stop
SIGCHLD23•child status has changed
SIGTTIN24†background read attempted from control terminal
SIGTTOU25†background write attempted to control terminal
SIGIO  26I/O is possible on a descriptor
SIGTINT26input record is available at control terminal
SIGXCPU27cpu time limit exceeded
SIGXFSZ28file size limit exceeded
SIGVTALRM29virtual time alarm
SIGPROF30profiling timer alarm
SIGURG31•urgent condition present on socket

If func is SIG_DFL, the default action for signal sig is reinstated.  This default is termination, except for signals marked with • or †.  Signals marked with • 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.  Unlike previous signal facilities, the handler func remains installed after a signal has been delivered. 

During certain system calls, if a caught signal occurs and the call terminates prematurely, the call is automatically restarted.  In particular, this can occur during a read or write(2) on a slow device (such as a terminal) 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.  Execve(2) resets all signals caught to the default action; ignored signals are not affected. 

NOTES

DOMAIN systems send the signal SIGAPOLLO whenever a fault occurs that is not otherwise mapped into a signal.  Typical generators of SIGAPOLLO include network failures, display-acquire timeouts, and disk full errors. 

The handler routine can be declared: handler(sig, code, scp) Here sig is the signal number, into which the hardware faults and traps are mapped as defined below.  Code is a 32-bit value; one of the values listed above or, if the signal is SIGAPOLLO, the DOMAIN System status code describing the fault.  To generate a list of DOMAIN System status codes and brief explanations of their meanings, run the command /systest/ssr_util/all_stcode.  Scp is a pointer to the struct sigcontext used by the system to restore the process context from before the signal.  Compatibility mode faults are distinguished from the other SIGILL traps by having PSL_CM set in the psl. 

The following defines the mapping of hardware traps to signals and codes.  All of these symbols are defined in <signal.h>:

   Hardware conditionSignalCode
 Arithmetic traps:
   Integer overflowSIGFPEFPE_INTOVF_TRAP
   Integer division by zeroSIGFPEFPE_INTDIV_TRAP
   Floating overflow trapSIGFPEFPE_FLTOVF_TRAP
   Floating/decimal division by zeroSIGFPEFPE_FLTDIV_TRAP
   Floating underflow trapSIGFPEFPE_FLTUND_TRAP
   Decimal overflow trapSIGFPEFPE_DECOVF_TRAP
   Subscript-rangeSIGFPEFPE_SUBRNG_TRAP
   Floating overflow faultSIGFPEFPE_FLTOVF_FAULT
   Floating divide by zero faultSIGFPEFPE_FLTDIV_FAULT
   Floating underflow faultSIGFPEFPE_FLTUND_FAULT
Length access controlSIGSEGV
Protection violationSIGBUS
Reserved instructionSIGILLILL_RESAD_FAULT
Customer-reserved instr.SIGEMT
Reserved operandSIGILLILL_PRIVIN_FAULT
Reserved addressingSIGILLILL_RESOP_FAULT
Trace pendingSIGTRAP
Bpt instructionSIGTRAP

RETURN VALUE

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

ERRORS

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

[EINVAL] Sig is not a valid signal number. 

[EINVAL] An attempt is made to ignore or supply a handler for SIGKILL or SIGSTOP. 

[EINVAL] An attempt is made to ignore SIGCONT (by default SIGCONT is ignored). 

RELATED INFORMATION

kill(1), kill(2), sigvec(2), sigblock(2), sigsetmask(2), sigpause(2) sigstack(2), setjmp(3), tty(4)

Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026