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Top Forums Programming Signal Handling and Context Switches Post 302262201 by XComp on Wednesday 26th of November 2008 02:57:05 PM
Old 11-26-2008
Slightly different behaviour

So I've tested it on a OpenSuse machine. And there it behaves a little bit different. Instead of finishing there will be raised a segmentation fault. Here is the sample output for UPPER_BOUND = 500000000 and 500 ms intveral:

Ubuntu and VMWare:
Code:
[Main Function]        Program starts...
[Main Function]        scheduler_context was initialized...
[Main Function]        thread_context was initialized...
[Main Function]        The timer was initialized...
[Scheduler Function] Scheduler starts...
[Thread Function]      Function starts...
[Signal Handler]         SIGPROF was raised at 59902313...
[Scheduler Function ] Swap back is done...
[Thread Function]       Error: 1st counting didn't finished (59902313)...
[Signal Handler]         SIGPROF was raised at 58254699...
[Scheduler Function]   Swap back is done...
[Signal Handler]          SIGPROF was raised at 115562955...
[Scheduler Function]   Swap back is done...
[Thread Function]        Error: 2nd counting didn't finished (115562955)...
[Thread Function]        Function finishes...
[Scheduler Function]    Swap back is done...
[Scheduler Function]    Scheduler finishes...

Code:
[Main Function]        Program starts...
[Main Function]        scheduler_context was initialized...
[Main Function]        thread_context was initialized...
[Main Function]        The timer was initialized...
[Scheduler Function] Scheduler starts...
[Thread Function]      Function starts...
[Signal Handler]        SIGPROF was raised at 98310059...
[Scheduler Function] Swap back is done...
[Signal Handler]        SIGPROF was raised at 295005103...
 [Scheduler Function] Swap back is done..
[Thread Function]      1st counting worked fine...
 [Signal Handler]        SIGPROF was raised at 36236813...
Segmentation fault

What could be the reason of this segmentation fault. Could it be raised because of some mistakes in initializing the alternative signal stack? Does anyone has a good source, which explains, what happens inside the OS, when a context is swapped or a signal is raised? I didn't find anything on the web... :/

Last edited by XComp; 11-26-2008 at 04:51 PM..
 

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SIGNAL(3F)																SIGNAL(3F)

NAME
signal - change the action for a signal SYNOPSIS
integer function signal(signum, proc, flag) integer signum, flag external proc DESCRIPTION
When a process incurs a signal (see signal(3C)) the default action is usually to clean up and abort. The user may choose to write an alternative signal handling routine. A call to signal is the way this alternate action is specified to the system. Signum is the signal number (see signal(3C)). If flag is negative, then proc must be the name of the user signal handling routine. If flag is zero or positive, then proc is ignored and the value of flag is passed to the system as the signal action definition. In particu- lar, this is how previously saved signal actions can be restored. Two possible values for flag have specific meanings: 0 means "use the default action" (See NOTES below), 1 means "ignore this signal". A positive returned value is the previous action definition. A value greater than 1 is the address of a routine that was to have been called on occurrence of the given signal. The returned value can be used in subsequent calls to signal in order to restore a previous action definition. A negative returned value is the negation of a system error code. (See perror(3F)) FILES
/usr/lib/libU77.a SEE ALSO
signal(3C), kill(3F), kill(1) NOTES
f77 arranges to trap certain signals when a process is started. The only way to restore the default f77 action is to save the returned value from the first call to signal. If the user signal handler is called, it will be passed the signal number as an integer argument. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 15, 1985 SIGNAL(3F)
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