Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Signalsafe data structures
Top Forums Programming Signalsafe data structures Post 302579931 by JohnGraham on Wednesday 7th of December 2011 04:17:17 AM
Old 12-07-2011
The general way to deal with this is: don't. In your signal handler, do as little work as possible - i.e. set/increment a flag to let your program know the signal has been caught, and do the work from the main body of the code.

In the case of incrementing a flag, you might want to have a look at __sync_fetch_and_add() and such in the gcc documentation - do a search for "gcc atomic builtins".
 

3 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Recommendations For Generic C Data Structures & Algorithms

Hi All, Rather than re-invent the wheel, I am trying to find a mature C library that provides generic support for lists, trees, etc. I understand C doesn't formally support "generics", but am aware of a few solutions like GLib and SGLib. Can anyone kindly recommend what they think is best?... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tristan12
1 Replies

2. Programming

shared memory - userdefined data structures

Hello, I wonder if I can write my userdefined data structures(ex: a list) to a shared memory segment? I know, the shm functions get (void*) parameter so I should be able to read and write a list into the shared memory. may someone inform and clarify me about that, please? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: xyzt
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Data Structures

Here is what i need to do. @data #has all column wise data so say info for col 1 location for all rows would be in this array $array = \@data But i need to create a file which should contain these information in a format for all columns even if i have got no values from some of the index... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dinjo_jo
0 Replies
siginterrupt(3UCB)				     SunOS/BSD Compatibility Library Functions					siginterrupt(3UCB)

NAME
siginterrupt - allow signals to interrupt functions SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/cc [ flag ... ] file ... int siginterrupt( sig, flag); int sig, flag; DESCRIPTION
siginterrupt() is used to change the function restart behavior when a function is interrupted by the specified signal. If the flag is false(0), then functions will be restarted if they are interrupted by the specified signal and no data has been transferred yet. System call restart is the default behavior when the signal(3C) routine is used. If the flag is true, (1), then restarting of functions is disabled. If a function is interrupted by the specified signal and no data has been transferred, the function will return -1 with errno set to EINTR. Interrupted functions that have started transferring data will return the amount of data actually transferred. Issuing a siginterrupt() call during the execution of a signal handler will cause the new action to take place on the next signal to be caught. NOTES
Use of these interfaces should be restricted to only applications written on BSD platforms. Use of these interfaces with any of the system libraries or in multi-threaded applications is unsupported. This library routine uses an extension of the sigvec(3UCB) function that is not available in 4.2 BSD, hence it should not be used if back- ward compatibility is needed. RETURN VALUES
A 0 value indicates that the call succeeded. A -1 value indicates that the call failed and errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
siginterrupt() may return the following error: EINVAL sig is not a valid signal. SEE ALSO
sigblock(3UCB), sigvec(3UCB), signal(3C) SunOS 5.10 19 Feb 1993 siginterrupt(3UCB)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:13 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy