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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Signal trapped during read resumes sleeping Post 302977314 by Corona688 on Friday 15th of July 2016 05:26:53 PM
Old 07-15-2016
I don't think the "resethand" issue is related. Your shell has no issue receiving the interrupt, and does exactly what you told it to do -- wait for input. What needs to be told that something is happening is read. How can you do that? Close whatever it's reading from. Killing tail would do it, for example. Or using a named pipe and forcing it to close.

Code:
#!/bin/ksh

# On ctrl-C, close the read-end of the named pipe.
trap 'echo "Closing FIFO" ; exec 5<&-' INT

mkfifo $$ # Create a named pipe file in the current directory

# Open one end of pipe in background, read from log file,
# write into pipe.
# This will hang until we open the other end,
# so we have to put it in the background.
(exec tail -f /var/log/logfile > $$) &

exec 5<$$ # Open the other end in our shell, into file descriptor 5.
rm /tmp/$$ # Clean up mess

# Read from file descriptor 5 until something forces it to close,
# whether it be tail quitting, the pipe closing, or the apocalypse
while read LINE
do
        echo "$LINE"
done <&5

wait # wait for tail to quit.  Closing our end of the pipe ought to force it to quit (it will get SIGPIPE)

echo "Normal exit"

 

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trap(1) 							   User Commands							   trap(1)

NAME
trap, onintr - shell built-in functions to respond to (hardware) signals SYNOPSIS
sh trap [ argument n [n2...]] csh onintr [-| label] ksh *trap [ arg sig [ sig2...]] DESCRIPTION
sh The trap command argument is to be read and executed when the shell receives numeric or symbolic signal(s) (n). (Note: argument is scanned once when the trap is set and once when the trap is taken.) Trap commands are executed in order of signal number or corresponding symbolic names. Any attempt to set a trap on a signal that was ignored on entry to the current shell is ineffective. An attempt to trap on signal 11 (memory fault) produces an error. If argument is absent all trap(s) n are reset to their original values. If argument is the null string this signal is ignored by the shell and by the commands it invokes. If n is 0 the command argument is executed on exit from the shell. The trap command with no arguments prints a list of commands associated with each signal number. csh onintr controls the action of the shell on interrupts. With no arguments, onintr restores the default action of the shell on interrupts. (The shell terminates shell scripts and returns to the terminal command input level). With the - argument, the shell ignores all inter- rupts. With a label argument, the shell executes a goto label when an interrupt is received or a child process terminates because it was interrupted. ksh trap uses arg as a command to be read and executed when the shell receives signal(s) sig. (Note that arg is scanned once when the trap is set and once when the trap is taken.) Each sig can be given as a number or as the name of the signal. trap commands are executed in order of signal number. Any attempt to set a trap on a signal that was ignored on entry to the current shell is ineffective. If arg is omitted or is -, then the trap(s) for each sig are reset to their original values. If arg is the null (the empty string, e.g., "" ) string then this signal is ignored by the shell and by the commands it invokes. If sig is ERR then arg will be executed whenever a command has a non- zero exit status. If sig is DEBUG then arg will be executed after each command. If sig is 0 or EXIT for a trap set outside any function then the command arg is executed on exit from the shell. The trap command with no arguments prints a list of commands associated with each signal number. On this man page, ksh(1) commands that are preceded by one or two * (asterisks) are treated specially in the following ways: 1. Variable assignment lists preceding the command remain in effect when the command completes. 2. I/O redirections are processed after variable assignments. 3. Errors cause a script that contains them to abort. 4. Words, following a command preceded by ** that are in the format of a variable assignment, are expanded with the same rules as a vari- able assignment. This means that tilde substitution is performed after the = sign and word splitting and file name generation are not performed. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
csh(1), exit(1), ksh(1), sh(1), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 23 Oct 1994 trap(1)
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