Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

sigignore(3c) [hpux man page]

sigset(3C)																sigset(3C)

NAME
sigset(), sighold(), sigrelse(), sigignore() - signal management SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The system defines a set of signals that can be delivered to a process. The set of signals is defined in signal(5), along with the meaning and side effects of each signal. An alternate mechanism for handling these signals is defined here. The facilities described here should not be used in conjunction with the other facilities described under signal(2) and sigspace(2). allows the calling process to choose one of four ways to handle the receipt of a specific signal. sig specifies the signal and func speci- fies the action handler. sig can be any one of the signals described under signal(5) except or func is assigned one of four values: or a function address. The actions prescribed by and are described under signal(5). The action pre- scribed by and function address are described below: Hold signal. The signal sig is held upon receipt. Any pending signal of this signal type remains held. Only one signal of each type is held. Note: the signals and cannot be held. function address Catch signal. func must be a pointer to a function, the signal-catching handler, that is called when signal sig occurs. specifies that the process calls this function upon receipt of signal sig. Any pending signal of this type is released. This handler address is retained across calls to the other signal management functions listed here. Upon receipt of signal sig, the receiving process executes the signal-catching function pointed to by func as described under signal(5) with the follow- ing differences: Before calling the signal-catching handler, the defined action of sig is set to During a normal return from the signal- catching handler, the defined action is restored to func and any held signal of this type is released. If a non-local goto (longjmp(3C)) is taken, must be called to restore the defined action to func and release any held signal of this type. holds the signal sig. restores the defined action of sig to that specified previously by and are used to establish critical regions of code. is analogous to raising the priority level and deferring or holding a signal until the priority is lowered by sets the action for signal sig to (see signal(5)). RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, returns the previous value of the defined action for the specified signal sig. Otherwise, a value of is returned and is set to indicate the error. is defined in For the other functions, a 0 value indicates that the call succeeded. A -1 return value indicates an error occurred and is set to indicate the reason. ERRORS
fails and the defined action for sig is not changed if any of the following occur: The func argument points to memory that is not a valid part of the process address space. Reliable detection of this error is implementation dependent. and and fail and the defined action for sig is not changed if any of the following occur: sig is not a valid signal number. An attempt is made to ignore, hold, or supply a handler for a signal that cannot be ignored, held, or caught; see signal(5). WARNINGS
These signal facilities should not be used in conjunction with signal(2) and sigspace(2). SEE ALSO
kill(1), kill(2), pause(2), signal(2), sigspace(2), wait(2), abort(3C), setjmp(3C), sigpause(3C), signal(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
sigset(3C)

Check Out this Related Man Page

ssignal(3C)															       ssignal(3C)

NAME
ssignal(), gsignal() - software signals SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
and implement a software facility similar to signal(5). 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 15. A call to associates a proce- dure, action, with the software signal sig; the software signal, sig, is raised by a call to Raising a software signal causes the action established for that signal to be taken. The first argument to 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 (default) or (ignore). returns the action previously established for that signal type; if no action has been established or the signal number is illegal, returns raises the signal identified by its argument, sig: o If an action function has been established for sig, that action is reset to and the action function is entered with argument sig. returns the value returned to it by the action function. o If the action for sig is returns the value 1 and takes no other action. o If the action for sig is returns the value 0 and takes no other action. o If sig has an illegal value or no action was ever specified for sig, returns the value 0 and takes no other action. SEE ALSO
signal(5), thread_safety(5). NOTES
Some additional signals with numbers outside the range 1 through 15 are used by the Standard C Library to indicate error conditions. Those signal numbers outside the range 1 through 15 are legal, although their use may interfere with the operation of the Standard C Library. STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
ssignal(3C)
Man Page