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Full Discussion: signal handler for SIGCHLD
Top Forums Programming signal handler for SIGCHLD Post 76778 by Perderabo on Thursday 30th of June 2005 01:13:18 PM
Old 06-30-2005
I would like to add that signals in unix are generally not queued despite some documentation to the contrary. So if 3 children exit while the parent is not running, it is not probable that the parent will receive 3 SIGCHLD signals. So the handler should be willing to loop to reap zero or more children.

I see that Posix seems to be blessing most of the System V SIGCHLD semantics:

Quote:
SA_NOCLDWAIT --If set, and sig equals SIGCHLD, child processes of the calling processes shall not be transformed into zombie processes when they terminate. If the calling process subsequently waits for its children, and the process has no unwaited-for children that were transformed into zombie processes, it shall block until all of its children terminate, and wait(), waitid(), and waitpid() shall fail and set errno to [ECHILD]. Otherwise, terminating child processes shall be transformed into zombie processes, unless SIGCHLD is set to SIG_IGN.
That's from the Posix sigaction man page. So properly ignoring the signal may be an option as well.
 

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PTHREAD_ATFORK(3)					   BSD Library Functions Manual 					 PTHREAD_ATFORK(3)

NAME
pthread_atfork -- register handlers to be called when process forks LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <pthread.h> int pthread_atfork(void (*prepare)(void), void (*parent)(void), void (*child)(void)); DESCRIPTION
The pthread_atfork() function registers the provided handler functions to be called when the fork(2) function is called. Each of the three handlers is called at a different place in the fork(2) sequence. The prepare handler is called in the parent process before the fork hap- pens, the parent handler is called in the parent process after the fork has happened, and the child handler is called in the child process after the fork has happened. The parent and child handlers are called in the order in which they were registered, while the prepare handlers are called in reverse of the order in which they were registered. Any of the handlers given may be NULL. The intended use of pthread_atfork() is to provide a consistent state to a child process from a multithreaded parent process where locks may be acquired and released asynchronously with respect to the fork(2) call. Each subsystem with locks that are used in a child process should register handlers with pthread_atfork() that acquires those locks in the prepare handler and releases them in the parent handler. RETURN VALUES
The pthread_atfork() function returns 0 on success and an error number on failure. ERRORS
The following error code may be returned: [ENOMEM] Insufficient memory exists to register the fork handlers. SEE ALSO
fork(2) STANDARDS
The pthread_atfork() function conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1c-1995 (``POSIX.1''). HISTORY
The pthread_atfork() function first appeared in NetBSD 2.0. CAVEATS
After calling fork(2) from a multithreaded process, it is only safe to call async-signal-safe functions until calling one of the exec(3) functions. The pthread_*() functions are not async-signal-safe, so it is not safe to use such functions in the child handler. BUGS
There is no way to unregister a handler registered with pthread_atfork(). BSD
February 12, 2003 BSD
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