postsig(9) - NetBSD Manual Pages

SIGNAL(9)              NetBSD Kernel Developer's Manual              SIGNAL(9)


NAME
signal, siginit, sigactsinit, sigactsunshare, sigactsfree, execsigs, sigaction1, sigprocmask1, sigpending1, sigsuspend1, sigaltstack1, gsignal, pgsignal, psignal, sched_psignal, issignal, postsig, killproc, sigexit, sigmasked, trapsignal, sendsig, sigcode, sigtramp -- software signal facilities
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/signal.h> #include <sys/signalvar.h> void siginit(struct proc *p); void sigactsinit(struct proc *np, struct proc *pp, int share); void sigactsunshare(struct proc *p); void sigactsfree(struct proc *p); void execsigs(struct proc *p); int sigaction1(struct proc *p, int signum, const struct sigaction *nsa, struct sigaction *osa, void *tramp, int vers); int sigprocmask1(struct proc *p, int how, const sigset_t *nss, sigset_t *oss); void sigpending1(struct proc *p, sigset_t *ss); int sigsuspend1(struct proc *p, const sigset_t *ss); int sigaltstack1(struct proc *p, const struct sigaltstack *nss, struct sigaltstack *oss); void gsignal(int pgid, int signum); void kgsignal(int pgid, ksiginfo_t *ks, void *data); void pgsignal(struct pgrp *pgrp, int signum, int checkctty); void kpgsignal(struct pgrp *pgrp, ksiginfo_t *ks, void *data, int checkctty); void psignal(struct proc *p, int signum); void kpsignal(struct proc *p, ksiginfo_t *ks, void *data); void sched_psignal(struct proc *p, int signum); int issignal(struct lwp *l); void postsig(int signum); void killproc(struct proc *p, const char *why); void sigexit(struct proc *p, int signum); int sigmasked(struct proc *p, int signum); void trapsignal(struct proc *p, const ksiginfo_t *ks); void sendsig(const ksiginfo_t *ks, const sigset_t *mask);
DESCRIPTION
The system defines a set of signals that may be delivered to a process. These functions implement the kernel portion of the signal facility. Signal numbers used throughout the kernel signal facilities should always be within the range of [1-NSIG]. Most of the kernel's signal infrastructure is implemented in machine- independent code. Machine-dependent code provides support for invoking a process's signal handler, restoring context when the signal handler returns, generating signals when hardware traps occur, triggering the delivery of signals when a process is about to return from the kernel to userspace. The signal state for a process is contained in struct sigctx. This includes the list of signals with delivery pending, information about the signal handler stack, the signal mask, and the address of the signal trampoline. The registered signal handlers for a process are recorded in struct sigacts. This structure may be shared by multiple processes. The kernel's signal facilities are implemented by the following func- tions: void siginit(struct proc *p) This function initializes the signal state of proc0 to the system default. This signal state is then inherited by init(8) when it is started by the kernel. void sigactsinit(struct proc *np, struct proc *pp, int share) This function creates an initial struct sigacts for the process np. If the share argument is non-zero, then np shares the struct sigacts with the process pp. Otherwise, np receives a new struct sigacts which is copied from pp if non-NULL. void sigactsunshare(struct proc *p) This function causes the process p to no longer share its struct sigacts The current state of the signal actions is maintained in the new copy. void sigactsfree(struct proc *p) This function decrements the reference count on the struct sigacts of process p. If the reference count reaches zero, the struct sigacts is freed. void execsigs(struct proc *p) This function is used to reset the signal state of the process p to the system defaults when the process execs a new program image. int sigaction1(struct proc *p, int signum, const struct sigaction *nsa, struct sigaction *osa, void *tramp, int vers) This function implements the sigaction(2) system call. The tramp and vers arguments provide support for userspace signal trampo- lines. Trampoline version 0 is reserved for the legacy kernel- provided signal trampoline; tramp must be NULL in this case. Oth- erwise, vers specifies the ABI of the trampoline specified by tramp. The signal trampoline ABI is machine-dependent, and must be coordinated with the sendsig() function. int sigprocmask1(struct proc *p, int how, const sigset_t *nss, sigset_t *oss) This function implements the sigprocmask(2) system call. void sigpending1(struct proc *p, sigset_t *ss) This function implements the sigpending(2) system call. int sigsuspend1(struct proc *p, const sigset_t *ss) This function implements the sigsuspend(2) system call. int sigaltstack1(struct proc *p, const struct sigaltstack *nss, struct sigaltstack *oss) This function implements the sigaltstack(2) system call. void gsignal(int pgid, int signum) This is a wrapper function for kgsignal() which is described below. void kgsignal(int pgid, ksiginfo_t *ks, void *data) Schedule the signal ks->ksi_signo to be delivered to all members of the process group specified by pgid. The data argument and the complete signal scheduling semantics are described in the kpsignal() function below. below for a complete description of the signal scheduling semantics. void pgsignal(struct pgrp *pgrp, int signum, int checkctty) This is a wrapper function for kpgsignal() which is described below. void kpgsignal(struct pgrp *pgrp, ksiginfo_t *ks, void *data, int checkctty) Schedule the signal ks->ksi_signo to be delivered to all members of the process group pgrp. If checkctty is non-zero, the signal is only sent to processes which have a controlling terminal. The data argument and the complete signal scheduling semantics are described in the kpsignal() function below. void trapsignal(struct proc *p, const ksiginfo_t *ks) Sends the signal ks->ksi_signo caused by a hardware trap to the process p. This function is meant to be called by machine-depen- dent trap handling code, through the p->p_emul->e_trapsignal func- tion pointer because some emulations define their own trapsignal functions that remap the signal information to what the emulation expects. void psignal(struct proc *p, int signum) This is a wrapper function for kpsignal() which is described below. void kpsignal(struct proc *p, ksiginfo_t *ks, void *data) Schedule the signal ks->ksi_signo to be delivered to the process p. The data argument, if not NULL, points to the file descriptor data that caused the signal to be generated in the SIGIO case. With a few exceptions noted below, the target process signal dis- position is updated and is marked as runnable, so further handling of the signal is done in the context of the target process after a context switch; see issignal() below. Note that kpsignal() does not by itself cause a context switch to happen. The target process is not marked as runnable in the following cases: · The target process is sleeping uninterruptibly. The signal will be noticed when the process returns from the system call or trap. · The target process is currently ignoring the signal. · If a stop signal is sent to a sleeping process that takes the default action (see sigaction(2)), the process is stopped without awakening it. · SIGCONT restarts a stopped process (or puts them back to sleep) regardless of the signal action (e.g., blocked or ignored). If the target process is being traced, kpsignal() behaves as if the target process were taking the default action for signum. This allows the tracing process to be notified of the signal. void sched_psignal(struct proc *p, int signum) An alternate version of kpsignal() which is intended for use by code which holds the scheduler lock. int issignal(struct lwp *l) This function determines which signal, if any, is to be posted to the process p. A signal is to be posted if: · The signal has a handler provided by the program image. · The signal should cause the process to dump core and/or terminate. · The signal should interrupt the current system call. Signals which cause the process to be stopped are handled within issignal() directly. issignal() should be called by machine-dependent code when return- ing to userspace from a system call or other trap or interrupt by using the following code: while (signum = CURSIG(curproc)) postsig(signum); void postsig(int signum) The postsig() function is used to invoke the action for the signal signum in the current process. If the default action of a signal is to terminate the process, and the signal does not have a regis- tered handler, the process exits using sigexit(), dumping a core image if necessary. void killproc(struct proc *p, const char *why) This function sends a SIGKILL signal to the specified process. The message provided by why is sent to the system log and is also displayed on the process's controlling terminal. void sigexit(struct proc *p, int signum) This function forces the process p to exit with the signal signum, generating a core file if appropriate. No checks are made for masked or caught signals; the process always exits. int sigmasked(struct proc *p, int signum) This function returns non-zero if the signal specified by signum is ignored or masked for process p. void sendsig(const ksiginfo_t *ks, const sigset_t *mask) This function is provided by machine-dependent code, and is used to invoke a signal handler for the current process. sendsig() must prepare the registers and stack of the current process to invoke the signal handler stored in the process's struct sigacts. This may include switching to an alternate signal stack specified by the process. The previous register, stack, and signal state are stored in a ucontext_t, which is then copied out to the user's stack. The registers and stack must be set up to invoke the signal han- dler as follows: (*handler)(int signum, siginfo_t *info, void *ctx) where signum is the signal number, info contains additional signal specific information when SA_SIGINFO is specified when setting up the signal handler. ctx is the pointer to ucontext_t on the user's stack. The registers and stack must also arrange for the signal handler to return to the signal trampoline. The trampoline is then used to return to the code which was executing when the signal was delivered using the setcontext(2) system call. For performance reasons, it is recommended that sendsig() arrange for the signal handler to be invoked directly on architectures where it is convenient to do so. In this case, the trampoline is used only for the signal return path. If it is not feasible to directly invoke the signal handler, the trampoline is also used to invoke the handler, performing any final set up that was not pos- sible for sendsig() to perform. sendsig() must invoke the signal trampoline with the correct ABI. The ABI of the signal trampoline is specified on a per-signal basis in the sigacts() structure for the process. Trampoline ver- sion 0 is reserved for the legacy kernel-provided, on-stack signal trampoline. All other trampoline versions indicate a specific trampoline ABI. This ABI is coordinated with machine-dependent code in the system C library. SIGNAL TRAMPOLINE The signal trampoline is a special piece of code which provides support for invoking the signal handlers for a process. The trampoline is used to return from the signal handler back to the code which was executing when the signal was delivered, and is also used to invoke the handler itself on architectures where it is not feasible to have the kernel invoke the handler directly. In traditional UNIX systems, the signal trampoline, also referred to as the ``sigcode'', is provided by the kernel and copied to the top of the user's stack when a new process is created or a new program image is exec'd. Starting in NetBSD 2.0, the signal trampoline is provided by the system C library. This allows for more flexibility when the signal facility is extended, makes dealing with signals easier in debuggers, such as gdb(1), and may also enhance system security by allowing the ker- nel to disallow execution of code on the stack. The signal trampoline is specified on a per-signal basis. The correct trampoline is selected automatically by the C library when a signal han- dler is registered by a process. Signal trampolines have a special naming convention which enables debug- gers to determine the characteristics of the signal handler and its argu- ments. Trampoline functions are named like so: __sigtramp_<flavor>_<version> where: <flavor> The flavor of the signal handler. The following flavors are valid: sigcontext Specifies a traditional BSD-style (deprecated) signal handler with the following signature: void (*handler)(int signum, int code, struct sigcontext *scp); siginfo Specifies a POSIX-style signal handler with the following signature: void (*handler)(int signum, siginfo_t *si, void *uc); Note: sigcontext style signal handlers are dep- recated, and retained only for compatibility with older binaries. <version> Specifies the ABI version of the signal trampoline. The tram- poline ABI is coordinated with the machine-dependent kernel sendsig() function. The trampoline version needs to be unique even across different trampoline flavors, in order to simplify trampoline selection in the kernel. The following is an example if a signal trampoline name which indicates that the trampoline is used for traditional BSD-style signal handlers and implements version 1 of the signal trampoline ABI: __sigtramp_sigcontext_1 The current signal trampoline is: __sigtramp_siginfo_2
SEE ALSO
sigaction(2), signal(7), condvar(9) NetBSD 5.1 December 20, 2005 NetBSD 5.1

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