Suvarna Garge (Editor)

C signal handling

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In the C Standard Library, signal processing defines how a program handles various signals while it executes. A signal can report some exceptional behavior within the program (such as division by zero), or a signal can report some asynchronous event outside the program (such as someone striking an interactive attention key on a keyboard).

Contents

Standard signals

The C standard defines only 6 signals. They are all defined in signal.h header (csignal header in C++):

  • SIGABRT - "abort", abnormal termination.
  • SIGFPE - floating point exception.
  • SIGILL - "illegal", invalid instruction.
  • SIGINT - "interrupt", interactive attention request sent to the program.
  • SIGSEGV - "segmentation violation, invalid memory access.
  • SIGTERM - "terminate", termination request sent to the program.
  • Additional signals may be specified in the signal.h header by the implementation. For example, Unix and Unix-like operating systems (such as Linux) define more than 15 additional signals; see Unix signal.

    Handling

    A signal can be generated by calling raise() or kill() system calls. raise() sends a signal to the current process, kill() sends a signal to a specific process.

    A signal handler can be specified for all but two signals (SIGKILL and SIGSTOP cannot be caught, blocked or ignored). A signal handler is a function which is called by the target environment when the corresponding signal occurs. The target environment suspends execution of the program until the signal handler returns or calls longjmp(). For maximum portability, an asynchronous signal handler should only:

  • make successful calls to the function signal()
  • assign values to objects of type volatile sig_atomic_t
  • return control to its caller
  • If the signal reports an error within the program (and the signal is not asynchronous), the signal handler can terminate by calling abort(), exit(), or longjmp().

    References

    C signal handling Wikipedia