4.3BSD-Reno/share/man/cat3/signal.0

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SIGNAL(3C)		      1990		       SIGNAL(3C)



NNAAMMEE
     signal - simplified software signal facilities

SSYYNNOOPPSSIISS
     ##iinncclluuddee <<ssiiggnnaall..hh>>

     vvooiidd ((**ssiiggnnaall((ssiigg,, ffuunncc))))(())
     vvooiidd ((**ffuunncc))(());;

DDEESSCCRRIIPPTTIIOONN
     _S_i_g_n_a_l is a simplified interface to the more general _s_i_g_a_c_-
     _t_i_o_n(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
     _t_t_y(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 dis-
     carded if the process has not requested otherwise.  Except
     for the SIGKILL and SIGSTOP signals, the _s_i_g_n_a_l call allows
     signals either to be ignored or to cause an interrupt to a
     specified location.  The following is a list of all signals
     with names as in the include file <_s_i_g_n_a_l._h>:

     SIGHUP    1    hangup
     SIGINT    2    interrupt
     SIGQUIT   3*   quit
     SIGILL    4*   illegal instruction
     SIGTRAP   5*   trace trap
     SIGABRT   6*   _a_b_o_r_t() call (formerly SIGIOT)
     SIGEMT    7*   EMT instruction
     SIGFPE    8*   floating point exception
     SIGKILL   9    kill (cannot be caught or ignored)
     SIGBUS    10*  bus error
     SIGSEGV   11*  segmentation violation
     SIGSYS    12*  bad argument to system call
     SIGPIPE   13   write on a pipe with no one to read it
     SIGALRM   14   alarm clock
     SIGTERM   15   software termination signal
     SIGURG    16@  urgent condition present on socket
     SIGSTOP   17'|+'stop (cannot be caught or ignored)
     SIGTSTP   18'|+'stop signal generated from keyboard
     SIGCONT   19@  continue after stop
     SIGCHLD   20@  child status has changed
     SIGTTIN   21'|+'background read attempted from control terminal
     SIGTTOU   22'|+'background write attempted to control terminal



Printed 7/27/90               July				1






SIGNAL(3C)		      1990		       SIGNAL(3C)



     SIGIO     23@  i/o is possible on a descriptor (see _f_c_n_t_l(2))
     SIGXCPU   24   cpu time limit exceeded (see _s_e_t_r_l_i_m_i_t(2))
     SIGXFSZ   25   file size limit exceeded (see _s_e_t_r_l_i_m_i_t(2))
     SIGVTALRM 26   virtual time alarm (see _s_e_t_i_t_i_m_e_r(2))
     SIGPROF   27   profiling timer alarm (see _s_e_t_i_t_i_m_e_r(2))
     SIGWINCH  28@  Window size change
     SIGINFO   29@  status request from keyboard
     SIGUSR1   30   User defined signal 1
     SIGUSR2   31   User defined signal 2

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

     If _f_u_n_c is SIG_DFL, the default action for signal _s_i_g is
     reinstated; this default is termination (with a core image
     for starred signals) 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 _f_u_n_c 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 _f_u_n_c is called.

     A return from the function unblocks the handled signal and
     continues the process at the point it was interrupted.
     UUnnlliikkee pprreevviioouuss ssiiggnnaall ffaacciilliittiieess,, tthhee hhaannddlleerr _f_u_n_c rreemmaaiinnss
     iinnssttaalllleedd aafftteerr aa ssiiggnnaall hhaass bbeeeenn ddeelliivveerreedd..

     If a caught signal occurs during certain system calls, caus-
     ing the call to terminate prematurely, the call is automati-
     cally restarted (the handler is installed using the
     SA_RESTART flag with _s_i_g_a_c_t_i_o_n(2)).  The affected system
     calls include _r_e_a_d(2), _w_r_i_t_e(2), _s_e_n_d_t_o(2), _r_e_c_v_f_r_o_m(2),
     _s_e_n_d_m_s_g(2) and _r_e_c_v_m_s_g(2) on a communications channel or a
     slow device (such as a terminal, but not a regular file) and
     during a _w_a_i_t(2) or _i_o_c_t_l(2).  However, calls that have
     already committed are not restarted, but instead return a
     partial success (for example, a short read count).

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

     After a _f_o_r_k(2) or _v_f_o_r_k(2) the child inherits all signals.
     _E_x_e_c_v_e(2) resets all caught signals to the default action;
     ignored signals remain ignored.

RREETTUURRNN VVAALLUUEE
     The previous action is returned on a successful call.  Oth-
     erwise, -1 is returned and _e_r_r_n_o is set to indicate the
     error.





Printed 7/27/90               July				2






SIGNAL(3C)		      1990		       SIGNAL(3C)



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

     [EINVAL]	    _S_i_g is not a valid signal number.

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

SSEEEE AALLSSOO
     kill(1), ptrace(2), kill(2), sigaction(2), sigprocmask(2),
     sigsuspend(2), sigstack(2), setjmp(3), tty(4)

NNOOTTEESS  ((VVAAXX--1111))
     The handler routine can be declared:

	 void handler(sig, code, scp)

     Here _s_i_g is the signal number, into which the hardware
     faults and traps are mapped as defined below.  Code is a
     parameter which is either a constant as given below or, for
     compatibility mode faults, the code provided by the
     hardware. _S_c_p is a pointer to the _s_t_r_u_c_t _s_i_g_c_o_n_t_e_x_t 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 sig-
     nals and codes.  All of these symbols are defined in
     <_s_i_g_n_a_l._h>:

	Hardware condition		    Signal	 Code

     Arithmetic traps:
	Integer overflow		    SIGFPE	 FPE_INTOVF_TRAP
	Integer division by zero	    SIGFPE	 FPE_INTDIV_TRAP
	Floating overflow trap		    SIGFPE	 FPE_FLTOVF_TRAP
	Floating/decimal division by zero   SIGFPE	 FPE_FLTDIV_TRAP
	Floating underflow trap             SIGFPE	 FPE_FLTUND_TRAP
	Decimal overflow trap		    SIGFPE	 FPE_DECOVF_TRAP
	Subscript-range                     SIGFPE	 FPE_SUBRNG_TRAP
	Floating overflow fault             SIGFPE	 FPE_FLTOVF_FAULT
	Floating divide by zero fault	    SIGFPE	 FPE_FLTDIV_FAULT
	Floating underflow fault	    SIGFPE	 FPE_FLTUND_FAULT
     Length access control		    SIGSEGV
     Protection violation		    SIGBUS
     Reserved instruction		    SIGILL	 ILL_RESAD_FAULT
     Customer-reserved instr.		    SIGEMT
     Reserved operand			    SIGILL	 ILL_PRIVIN_FAULT
     Reserved addressing		    SIGILL	 ILL_RESOP_FAULT
     Trace pending			    SIGTRAP
     Bpt instruction			    SIGTRAP



Printed 7/27/90               July				3






SIGNAL(3C)		      1990		       SIGNAL(3C)



     Compatibility-mode                     SIGILL	 hardware supplied code
     Chme				    SIGSEGV
     Chms				    SIGSEGV
     Chmu				    SIGSEGV



















































Printed 7/27/90               July				4