Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ ssignal(3C) — sys5 — Apollo Domain/OS SR10.4.1

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought

Related Articles

signal(2)

sigset(2)

SSIGNAL(3C)                          SysV                          SSIGNAL(3C)



NAME
     ssignal, gsignal - software signals

SYNOPSIS
     #include <signal.h>

     int (*ssignal (sig, action))( )
     int sig, (*action)( );

     int gsignal (sig)
     int sig;

DESCRIPTION
     ssignal and gsignal implement a software facility similar to signal(2).
     This facility is used by the Standard C Library to enable users to
     indicate the disposition of error conditions, and is also made available
     to users for their own purposes.

     Software signals made available to users are associated with integers in
     the inclusive range 1 through 16. A call to ssignal associates a
     procedure, action, with the software signal sig; the software signal,
     sig, is raised by a call to gsignal.  Raising a software signal causes
     the action established for that signal to be taken.

     The first argument to ssignal is a number identifying the type of signal
     for which an action is to be established. The second argument defines the
     action; it is either the name of a (user-defined) action function or one
     of the manifest constants SIG_DFL (default) or SIG_IGN (ignore).  ssignal
     returns the action previously established for that signal type; if no
     action has been established or the signal number is illegal, ssignal
     returns SIG_DFL.

     gsignal raises the signal identified by its argument, sig:

          If an action function has been established for sig, then that action
          is reset to SIG_DFL and the action function is entered with argument
          sig.  gsignal returns the value returned to it by the action
          function.

          If the action for sig is SIG_IGN, gsignal returns the value 1 and
          takes no other action.

          If the action for sig is SIG_DFL, gsignal returns the value 0 and
          takes no other action.

          If sig has an illegal value or no action was ever specified for sig,
          gsignal returns the value 0 and takes no other action.

SEE ALSO
     signal(2), sigset(2).

NOTES
     There are some additional signals with numbers outside the range 1
     through 16 which are used by the Standard C Library to indicate error
     conditions.  Thus, some signal numbers outside the range 1 through 16 are
     legal, although their use may interfere with the operation of the
     Standard C Library.

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