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<signal.h>(0P)		   POSIX Programmer's Manual		<signal.h>(0P)

NAME
       signal.h - signals

SYNOPSIS
       #include <signal.h>

DESCRIPTION
       Some  of the functionality described on this reference page extends the
       ISO C standard. Applications shall define the appropriate feature  test
       macro  (see  the System Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Sec‐
       tion 2.2, The Compilation Environment)  to  enable  the	visibility  of
       these symbols in this header.

       The  <signal.h>	header	shall define the following symbolic constants,
       each of which expands to a distinct constant expression of the type:

	      void (*)(int)

       whose value matches no declarable function.

       SIG_DFL
	      Request for default signal handling.

       SIG_ERR
	      Return value from signal() in case of error.

       SIG_HOLD
	      Request that signal be held.

       SIG_IGN
	      Request that signal be ignored.

       The following data types shall be defined through typedef:

       sig_atomic_t
	      Possibly volatile-qualified integer type of an object  that  can
	      be  accessed  as an atomic entity, even in the presence of asyn‐
	      chronous interrupts.

       sigset_t
	      Integer or structure type of an object used to represent sets of
	      signals.

       pid_t  As described in <sys/types.h> .

       The <signal.h> header shall define the sigevent structure, which has at
       least the following members:

	      int		     sigev_notify	     Notification type.
	      int		     sigev_signo	     Signal number.
	      union sigval	     sigev_value	     Signal value.
	      void(*)(union sigval)  sigev_notify_function   Notification function.
	      (pthread_attr_t *)     sigev_notify_attributes Notification attributes.

       The following values of sigev_notify shall be defined:

       SIGEV_NONE
	      No asynchronous notification is  delivered  when	the  event  of
	      interest occurs.

       SIGEV_SIGNAL
	      A queued signal, with an application-defined value, is generated
	      when the event of interest occurs.

       SIGEV_THREAD
	      A notification function is called to perform notification.

       The sigval union shall be defined as:

	      int    sival_int	  Integer signal value.
	      void  *sival_ptr	  Pointer signal value.

       This header shall also declare the macros SIGRTMIN and SIGRTMAX,	 which
       evaluate	 to integer expressions, and specify a range of signal numbers
       that are reserved for application use and for which the realtime signal
       behavior specified in this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 is supported.
       The signal numbers in this range do not	overlap	 any  of  the  signals
       specified in the following table.

       The  range  SIGRTMIN  through SIGRTMAX inclusive shall include at least
       {RTSIG_MAX} signal numbers.

       It is implementation-defined whether realtime signal behavior  is  sup‐
       ported for other signals.

       This  header  also declares the constants that are used to refer to the
       signals that occur in the system. Signals defined here begin  with  the
       letters SIG. Each of the signals have distinct positive integer values.
       The value 0 is reserved for use as the null signal (see kill()).	 Addi‐
       tional implementation-defined signals may occur in the system.

       The ISO C standard only requires the signal names SIGABRT, SIGFPE, SIG‐
       ILL, SIGINT, SIGSEGV, and SIGTERM to be defined.

       The  following  signals	shall  be  supported  on  all  implementations
       (default actions are explained below the table):

	  Signal    Default Action Description
	  SIGABRT   A		   Process abort signal.
	  SIGALRM   T		   Alarm clock.
	  SIGBUS    A		   Access to an undefined portion of a mem‐
				   ory object.
	  SIGCHLD   I		   Child process terminated, stopped,
				   or continued.
	  SIGCONT   C		   Continue executing, if stopped.
	  SIGFPE    A		   Erroneous arithmetic operation.
	  SIGHUP    T		   Hangup.
	  SIGILL    A		   Illegal instruction.
	  SIGINT    T		   Terminal interrupt signal.
	  SIGKILL   T		   Kill (cannot be caught or ignored).
	  SIGPIPE   T		   Write on a pipe with no one to read it.
	  SIGQUIT   A		   Terminal quit signal.
	  SIGSEGV   A		   Invalid memory reference.
	  SIGSTOP   S		   Stop executing (cannot be caught or
				   ignored).
	  SIGTERM   T		   Termination signal.
	  SIGTSTP   S		   Terminal stop signal.
	  SIGTTIN   S		   Background process attempting read.
	  SIGTTOU   S		   Background process attempting write.
	  SIGUSR1   T		   User-defined signal 1.
	  SIGUSR2   T		   User-defined signal 2.
	  SIGPOLL   T		   Pollable event.
	  SIGPROF   T		   Profiling timer expired.

	  SIGSYS    A		   Bad system call.
	  SIGTRAP   A		   Trace/breakpoint trap.
	  SIGURG    I		   High bandwidth data is available at a
				   socket.
	  SIGVTALRM T		   Virtual timer expired.
	  SIGXCPU   A		   CPU time limit exceeded.
	  SIGXFSZ   A		   File size limit exceeded.

       The default actions are as follows:

       T      Abnormal termination of the process. The process	is  terminated
	      with all the consequences of _exit() except that the status made
	      available to wait() and waitpid() indicates abnormal termination
	      by the specified signal.

       A      Abnormal termination of the process.
	      Additionally,    implementation-defined	abnormal   termination
	      actions, such as creation of a core file, may occur.

       I      Ignore the signal.

       S      Stop the process.

       C      Continue the process, if it is stopped;  otherwise,  ignore  the
	      signal.

       The  header  shall provide a declaration of struct sigaction, including
       at least the following members:

	      void (*sa_handler)(int)  Pointer to a signal-catching function or one of the macros
				       SIG_IGN or SIG_DFL.
	      sigset_t sa_mask	       Set of signals to be blocked during execution of the signal
				       handling function.
	      int      sa_flags	       Special flags.
	      void (*sa_sigaction)(int, siginfo_t *, void *)
				       Pointer to a signal-catching function.

       The storage occupied by sa_handler and sa_sigaction may overlap, and  a
       conforming application shall not use both simultaneously.

       The following shall be declared as constants:

       SA_NOCLDSTOP
	      Do not generate SIGCHLD when children stop
	      or stopped children continue.

       SIG_BLOCK
	      The resulting set is the union of the current set and the signal
	      set pointed to by the argument set.

       SIG_UNBLOCK
	      The resulting set is the intersection of the current set and the
	      complement of the signal set pointed to by the argument set.

       SIG_SETMASK
	      The  resulting  set is the signal set pointed to by the argument
	      set.

       SA_ONSTACK
	      Causes signal delivery to occur on an alternate stack.

       SA_RESETHAND
	      Causes signal dispositions to be set to SIG_DFL on entry to sig‐
	      nal handlers.

       SA_RESTART
	      Causes certain functions to become restartable.

       SA_SIGINFO
	      Causes  extra information to be passed to signal handlers at the
	      time of receipt of a signal.

       SA_NOCLDWAIT
	      Causes implementations not to create zombie processes  on	 child
	      death.

       SA_NODEFER
	      Causes signal not to be automatically blocked on entry to signal
	      handler.

       SS_ONSTACK
	      Process is executing on an alternate signal stack.

       SS_DISABLE
	      Alternate signal stack is disabled.

       MINSIGSTKSZ
	      Minimum stack size for a signal handler.

       SIGSTKSZ
	      Default size in bytes for the alternate signal stack.

       The ucontext_t structure shall be defined through typedef as  described
       in <ucontext.h>.

       The  mcontext_t	type  shall be defined through typedef as described in
       <ucontext.h>.

       The <signal.h> header shall define the stack_t type as a structure that
       includes at least the following members:

	      void     *ss_sp	    Stack base or pointer.
	      size_t	ss_size	    Stack size.
	      int	ss_flags    Flags.

       The <signal.h> header shall define the sigstack structure that includes
       at least the following members:

	      int	ss_onstack  Non-zero when signal stack is in use.
	      void     *ss_sp	    Signal stack pointer.

       The <signal.h> header shall define the siginfo_t type  as  a  structure
       that includes at least the following members:

	      int	    si_signo  Signal number.

	      int	    si_errno  If non-zero, an errno value associated with
				      this signal, as defined in <errno.h>.

	      int	    si_code   Signal code.

	      pid_t	    si_pid    Sending process ID.
	      uid_t	    si_uid    Real user ID of sending process.
	      void	   *si_addr   Address of faulting instruction.
	      int	    si_status Exit value or signal.
	      long	    si_band   Band event for SIGPOLL.

	      union sigval  si_value  Signal value.

       The  macros  specified  in  the	Code column of the following table are
       defined for use as values of si_code that are  signal-specific or  non-
       signal-specific reasons why the signal was generated.

	 Signal	   Code		   Reason
	 SIGILL	   ILL_ILLOPC	   Illegal opcode.
		   ILL_ILLOPN	   Illegal operand.
		   ILL_ILLADR	   Illegal addressing mode.
		   ILL_ILLTRP	   Illegal trap.
		   ILL_PRVOPC	   Privileged opcode.
		   ILL_PRVREG	   Privileged register.
		   ILL_COPROC	   Coprocessor error.
		   ILL_BADSTK	   Internal stack error.
	 SIGFPE	   FPE_INTDIV	   Integer divide by zero.
		   FPE_INTOVF	   Integer overflow.
		   FPE_FLTDIV	   Floating-point divide by zero.
		   FPE_FLTOVF	   Floating-point overflow.
		   FPE_FLTUND	   Floating-point underflow.
		   FPE_FLTRES	   Floating-point inexact result.
		   FPE_FLTINV	   Invalid floating-point operation.
		   FPE_FLTSUB	   Subscript out of range.
	 SIGSEGV   SEGV_MAPERR	   Address not mapped to object.
		   SEGV_ACCERR	   Invalid permissions for mapped object.
	 SIGBUS	   BUS_ADRALN	   Invalid address alignment.
		   BUS_ADRERR	   Nonexistent physical address.
		   BUS_OBJERR	   Object-specific hardware error.
	 SIGTRAP   TRAP_BRKPT	   Process breakpoint.
		   TRAP_TRACE	   Process trace trap.
	 SIGCHLD   CLD_EXITED	   Child has exited.
		   CLD_KILLED	   Child has terminated abnormally and did
				   not create a core file.
		   CLD_DUMPED	   Child has terminated abnormally and cre‐
				   ated a core file.
		   CLD_TRAPPED	   Traced child has trapped.
		   CLD_STOPPED	   Child has stopped.
		   CLD_CONTINUED   Stopped child has continued.
	 SIGPOLL   POLL_IN	   Data input available.
		   POLL_OUT	   Output buffers available.
		   POLL_MSG	   Input message available.
		   POLL_ERR	   I/O error.
		   POLL_PRI	   High priority input available.
		   POLL_HUP	   Device disconnected.
	 Any	   SI_USER	   Signal sent by kill().
		   SI_QUEUE	   Signal sent by the sigqueue().
		   SI_TIMER	   Signal generated by expiration of a
				   timer set by timer_settime().
		   SI_ASYNCIO	   Signal generated by completion of an
				   asynchronous I/O request.
		   SI_MESGQ	   Signal generated by arrival of a message
				   on an empty message queue.

       Implementations may support additional si_code values not  included  in
       this  list,  may	 generate  values  included in this list under circum‐
       stances other than those described in this list, and may contain exten‐
       sions  or  limitations  that  prevent some values from being generated.
       Implementations do  not	generate  a  different	value  from  the  ones
       described in this list for circumstances described in this list.

       In  addition, the following signal-specific information shall be avail‐
       able:

       Signal  Member	      Value
       SIGILL  void * si_addr Address of faulting instruction.
       SIGFPE
       SIGSEGV void * si_addr Address of faulting memory reference.
       SIGBUS
       SIGCHLD pid_t si_pid   Child process ID.
	       int si_status  Exit value or signal.
	       uid_t si_uid   Real user ID of the process that sent the signal.
       SIGPOLL long si_band   Band event for POLL_IN, POLL_OUT, or POLL_MSG.

       For some implementations, the value of si_addr may be inaccurate.

       The following shall be declared as functions and may also be defined as
       macros:

	      void (*bsd_signal(int, void (*)(int)))(int);

	      int    kill(pid_t, int);

	      int    killpg(pid_t, int);

	      int    pthread_kill(pthread_t, int);
	      int    pthread_sigmask(int, const sigset_t *, sigset_t *);

	      int    raise(int);

	      int    sigaction(int, const struct sigaction *restrict,
			 struct sigaction *restrict);
	      int    sigaddset(sigset_t *, int);

	      int    sigaltstack(const stack_t *restrict, stack_t *restrict);

	      int    sigdelset(sigset_t *, int);
	      int    sigemptyset(sigset_t *);
	      int    sigfillset(sigset_t *);

	      int    sighold(int);
	      int    sigignore(int);
	      int    siginterrupt(int, int);

	      int    sigismember(const sigset_t *, int);

	      void (*signal(int, void (*)(int)))(int);

	      int    sigpause(int);

	      int    sigpending(sigset_t *);
	      int    sigprocmask(int, const sigset_t *restrict, sigset_t *restrict);

	      int    sigqueue(pid_t, int, const union sigval);

	      int    sigrelse(int);
	      void (*sigset(int, void (*)(int)))(int);

	      int    sigsuspend(const sigset_t *);

	      int    sigtimedwait(const sigset_t *restrict, siginfo_t *restrict,
			 const struct timespec *restrict);

	      int    sigwait(const sigset_t *restrict, int *restrict);

	      int    sigwaitinfo(const sigset_t *restrict, siginfo_t *restrict);

       Inclusion  of  the  <signal.h> header may make visible all symbols from
       the <time.h> header.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE
       None.

RATIONALE
       None.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       None.

SEE ALSO
       <errno.h>, <stropts.h>, <sys/types.h>, <time.h>, <ucontext.h>, the Sys‐
       tem  Interfaces	volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, alarm(), bsd_signal(),
       ioctl(), kill(), killpg(), raise(), sigaction(),	 sigaddset(),  sigalt‐
       stack(),	  sigdelset(),	sigemptyset(),	sigfillset(),  siginterrupt(),
       sigismember(), signal(), sigpending(), sigprocmask(), sigqueue(),  sig‐
       suspend(), sigwaitinfo(), wait(), waitid()

COPYRIGHT
       Portions	 of  this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form
       from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
       --  Portable  Operating	System	Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
       Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003	by  the	 Institute  of
       Electrical  and	Electronics  Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the
       event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
       The  Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
       is the referee document. The original Standard can be  obtained	online
       at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

IEEE/The Open Group		     2003			<signal.h>(0P)
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