Scroll to navigation

SIGACTION(2) Linux Programmer's Manual SIGACTION(2)

NAME

sigaction - examine and change a signal action

SYNOPSIS

#include <signal.h>

int sigaction(int signum, const struct sigaction *act,
              struct sigaction *oldact);


Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):

sigaction(): _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 1 || _XOPEN_SOURCE || _POSIX_SOURCE

siginfo_t: _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 199309L

DESCRIPTION

The sigaction() system call is used to change the action taken by a process on receipt of a specific signal. (See signal(7) for an overview of signals.)

signum specifies the signal and can be any valid signal except SIGKILL and SIGSTOP.

If act is non-NULL, the new action for signal signum is installed from act. If oldact is non-NULL, the previous action is saved in oldact.

The sigaction structure is defined as something like:


struct sigaction {

void (*sa_handler)(int);
void (*sa_sigaction)(int, siginfo_t *, void *);
sigset_t sa_mask;
int sa_flags;
void (*sa_restorer)(void); };

On some architectures a union is involved: do not assign to both sa_handler and sa_sigaction.

The sa_restorer element is obsolete and should not be used. POSIX does not specify a sa_restorer element.

sa_handler specifies the action to be associated with signum and may be SIG_DFL for the default action, SIG_IGN to ignore this signal, or a pointer to a signal handling function. This function receives the signal number as its only argument.

If SA_SIGINFO is specified in sa_flags, then sa_sigaction (instead of sa_handler) specifies the signal-handling function for signum. This function receives the signal number as its first argument, a pointer to a siginfo_t as its second argument and a pointer to a ucontext_t (cast to void *) as its third argument. (Commonly, the handler function doesn't make any use of the third argument. See getcontext(3) for further information about ucontext_t.)

sa_mask specifies a mask of signals which should be blocked (i.e., added to the signal mask of the thread in which the signal handler is invoked) during execution of the signal handler. In addition, the signal which triggered the handler will be blocked, unless the SA_NODEFER flag is used.

sa_flags specifies a set of flags which modify the behavior of the signal. It is formed by the bitwise OR of zero or more of the following:

If signum is SIGCHLD, do not receive notification when child processes stop (i.e., when they receive one of SIGSTOP, SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN or SIGTTOU) or resume (i.e., they receive SIGCONT) (see wait(2)). This flag is meaningful only when establishing a handler for SIGCHLD.
If signum is SIGCHLD, do not transform children into zombies when they terminate. See also waitpid(2). This flag is meaningful only when establishing a handler for SIGCHLD, or when setting that signal's disposition to SIG_DFL.

If the SA_NOCLDWAIT flag is set when establishing a handler for SIGCHLD, POSIX.1 leaves it unspecified whether a SIGCHLD signal is generated when a child process terminates. On Linux, a SIGCHLD signal is generated in this case; on some other implementations, it is not.

Do not prevent the signal from being received from within its own signal handler. This flag is meaningful only when establishing a signal handler. SA_NOMASK is an obsolete, nonstandard synonym for this flag.
Call the signal handler on an alternate signal stack provided by sigaltstack(2). If an alternate stack is not available, the default stack will be used. This flag is meaningful only when establishing a signal handler.
Restore the signal action to the default upon entry to the signal handler. This flag is meaningful only when establishing a signal handler. SA_ONESHOT is an obsolete, nonstandard synonym for this flag.
Provide behavior compatible with BSD signal semantics by making certain system calls restartable across signals. This flag is meaningful only when establishing a signal handler. See signal(7) for a discussion of system call restarting.
The signal handler takes three arguments, not one. In this case, sa_sigaction should be set instead of sa_handler. This flag is meaningful only when establishing a signal handler.

The siginfo_t argument to sa_sigaction is a struct with the following elements:


siginfo_t {

int si_signo; /* Signal number */
int si_errno; /* An errno value */
int si_code; /* Signal code */
int si_trapno; /* Trap number that caused
hardware-generated signal
(unused on most architectures) */
pid_t si_pid; /* Sending process ID */
uid_t si_uid; /* Real user ID of sending process */
int si_status; /* Exit value or signal */
clock_t si_utime; /* User time consumed */
clock_t si_stime; /* System time consumed */
sigval_t si_value; /* Signal value */
int si_int; /* POSIX.1b signal */
void *si_ptr; /* POSIX.1b signal */
int si_overrun; /* Timer overrun count; POSIX.1b timers */
int si_timerid; /* Timer ID; POSIX.1b timers */
void *si_addr; /* Memory location which caused fault */
long si_band; /* Band event (was int in
glibc 2.3.2 and earlier) */
int si_fd; /* File descriptor */
short si_addr_lsb; /* Least significant bit of address
(since Linux 2.6.32) */ }

si_signo, si_errno and si_code are defined for all signals. (si_errno is generally unused on Linux.) The rest of the struct may be a union, so that one should read only the fields that are meaningful for the given signal:

  • Signals sent with kill(2) and sigqueue(3) fill in si_pid and si_uid. In addition, signals sent with sigqueue(3) fill in si_int and si_ptr with the values specified by the sender of the signal; see sigqueue(3) for more details.
  • Signals sent by POSIX.1b timers (since Linux 2.6) fill in si_overrun and si_timerid. The si_timerid field is an internal ID used by the kernel to identify the timer; it is not the same as the timer ID returned by timer_create(2). The si_overrun field is the timer overrun count; this is the same information as is obtained by a call to timer_getoverrun(2). These fields are nonstandard Linux extensions.
  • Signals sent for message queue notification (see the description of SIGEV_SIGNAL in mq_notify(3)) fill in si_int/si_ptr, with the sigev_value supplied to mq_notify(3); si_pid, with the process ID of the message sender; and si_uid, with the real user ID of the message sender.
  • SIGCHLD fills in si_pid, si_uid, si_status, si_utime and si_stime, providing information about the child. The si_pid field is the process ID of the child; si_uid is the child's real user ID. The si_status field contains the exit status of the child (if si_code is CLD_EXITED), or the signal number that caused the process to change state. The si_utime and si_stime contain the user and system CPU time used by the child process; these fields do not include the times used by waited-for children (unlike getrusage(2) and time(2)). In kernels up to 2.6, and since 2.6.27, these fields report CPU time in units of sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK). In 2.6 kernels before 2.6.27, a bug meant that these fields reported time in units of the (configurable) system jiffy (see time(7)).
  • SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV, SIGBUS, and SIGTRAP fill in si_addr with the address of the fault. On some architectures, these signals also fill in the si_trapno filed. Some suberrors of SIGBUS, in particular BUS_MCEERR_AO and BUS_MCEERR_AR, also fill in si_addr_lsb. This field indicates the least significant bit of the reported address and therefore the extent of the corruption. For example, if a full page was corrupted, si_addr_lsb contains log2(sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE)). BUS_MCERR_* and si_addr_lsb are Linux-specific extensions.
  • SIGIO/SIGPOLL (the two names are synonyms on Linux) fills in si_band and si_fd. The si_band event is a bit mask containing the same values as are filled in the revents field by poll(2). The si_fd field indicates the file descriptor for which the I/O event occurred.

si_code is a value (not a bit mask) indicating why this signal was sent. The following list shows the values which can be placed in si_code for any signal, along with reason that the signal was generated.

kill(2)
Sent by the kernel.
sigqueue(3)
POSIX timer expired
POSIX message queue state changed (since Linux 2.6.6); see mq_notify(3)
AIO completed
Queued SIGIO (only in kernels up to Linux 2.2; from Linux 2.4 onward SIGIO/SIGPOLL fills in si_code as described below).
tkill(2) or tgkill(2) (since Linux 2.4.19)

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGILL signal:

illegal opcode
illegal operand
illegal addressing mode
illegal trap
privileged opcode
privileged register
coprocessor error
internal stack error

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGFPE signal:

integer divide by zero
integer overflow
floating-point divide by zero
floating-point overflow
floating-point underflow
floating-point inexact result
floating-point invalid operation
subscript out of range

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGSEGV signal:

address not mapped to object
invalid permissions for mapped object

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGBUS signal:

invalid address alignment
nonexistent physical address
object-specific hardware error
Hardware memory error consumed on a machine check; action required.
Hardware memory error detected in process but not consumed; action optional.

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGTRAP signal:

process breakpoint
process trace trap
process taken branch trap
hardware breakpoint/watchpoint

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGCHLD signal:

child has exited
child was killed
child terminated abnormally
traced child has trapped
child has stopped
stopped child has continued (since Linux 2.6.9)

The following values can be placed in si_code for a SIGIO/SIGPOLL signal:

data input available
output buffers available
input message available
I/O error
high priority input available
device disconnected

RETURN VALUE

sigaction() returns 0 on success; on error, -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

act or oldact points to memory which is not a valid part of the process address space.
An invalid signal was specified. This will also be generated if an attempt is made to change the action for SIGKILL or SIGSTOP, which cannot be caught or ignored.

CONFORMING TO

POSIX.1-2001, SVr4.

NOTES

A child created via fork(2) inherits a copy of its parent's signal dispositions. During an execve(2), the dispositions of handled signals are reset to the default; the dispositions of ignored signals are left unchanged.

According to POSIX, the behavior of a process is undefined after it ignores a SIGFPE, SIGILL, or SIGSEGV signal that was not generated by kill(2) or raise(3). Integer division by zero has undefined result. On some architectures it will generate a SIGFPE signal. (Also dividing the most negative integer by -1 may generate SIGFPE.) Ignoring this signal might lead to an endless loop.

POSIX.1-1990 disallowed setting the action for SIGCHLD to SIG_IGN. POSIX.1-2001 allows this possibility, so that ignoring SIGCHLD can be used to prevent the creation of zombies (see wait(2)). Nevertheless, the historical BSD and System V behaviors for ignoring SIGCHLD differ, so that the only completely portable method of ensuring that terminated children do not become zombies is to catch the SIGCHLD signal and perform a wait(2) or similar.

POSIX.1-1990 specified only SA_NOCLDSTOP. POSIX.1-2001 added SA_NOCLDWAIT, SA_RESETHAND, SA_NODEFER, and SA_SIGINFO. Use of these latter values in sa_flags may be less portable in applications intended for older UNIX implementations.

The SA_RESETHAND flag is compatible with the SVr4 flag of the same name.

The SA_NODEFER flag is compatible with the SVr4 flag of the same name under kernels 1.3.9 and newer. On older kernels the Linux implementation allowed the receipt of any signal, not just the one we are installing (effectively overriding any sa_mask settings).

sigaction() can be called with a NULL second argument to query the current signal handler. It can also be used to check whether a given signal is valid for the current machine by calling it with NULL second and third arguments.

It is not possible to block SIGKILL or SIGSTOP (by specifying them in sa_mask). Attempts to do so are silently ignored.

See sigsetops(3) for details on manipulating signal sets.

See signal(7) for a list of the async-signal-safe functions that can be safely called inside from inside a signal handler.

Undocumented

Before the introduction of SA_SIGINFO it was also possible to get some additional information, namely by using a sa_handler with second argument of type struct sigcontext. See the relevant Linux kernel sources for details. This use is obsolete now.

BUGS

In kernels up to and including 2.6.13, specifying SA_NODEFER in sa_flags prevents not only the delivered signal from being masked during execution of the handler, but also the signals specified in sa_mask. This bug was fixed in kernel 2.6.14.

EXAMPLE

See mprotect(2).

SEE ALSO

kill(1), kill(2), killpg(2), pause(2), restart_syscall(2), sigaltstack(2), signal(2), signalfd(2), sigpending(2), sigprocmask(2), sigsuspend(2), wait(2), raise(3), siginterrupt(3), sigqueue(3), sigsetops(3), sigvec(3), core(5), signal(7)

COLOPHON

This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

2013-07-30 Linux