signal man page on SunOS

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signal(3UCB)	   SunOS/BSD Compatibility Library Functions	  signal(3UCB)

NAME
       signal - simplified software signal facilities

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/ucb/cc [ flag ... ] file ...
       #include <signal.h>

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

DESCRIPTION
       signal()	 is  a	simplified  interface to the more general sigvec(3UCB)
       facility.  Programs that use signal() in	 preference  to	 sigvec()  are
       more likely to be portable to all systems.

       A  signal is generated by some abnormal event, initiated by a user at a
       terminal (quit, interrupt, stop), by a program error (bus error, etc.),
       by  request  of	another	 program  (kill), or when a process is stopped
       because it wishes to access its control terminal	 while	in  the	 back‐
       ground  (see  termio(7I)).  Signals  are	 optionally  generated	when a
       process resumes after being stopped, when the status of child processes
       changes,	 or  when input is ready at the control terminal. Most signals
       cause termination of the receiving process if no action is taken;  some
       signals	instead cause the process receiving them to be stopped, or are
       simply discarded if the process has not requested otherwise. Except for
       the  SIGKILL  and  SIGSTOP  signals,  the  signal() call allows signals
       either to be ignored or to  interrupt  to  a  specified	location.  See
       sigvec(3UCB) for a complete list of the signals.

       If  func	 is  SIG_DFL, the default action for signal sig is reinstated;
       this default is termination (with a core	 image	for  starred  signals)
       except  for  signals  marked with · or a dagger.. Signals marked with ·
       are discarded if the action is SIG_DFL; signals marked  with  a	dagger
       cause  the  process  to	stop.  If func is SIG_IGN the signal is subse‐
       quently ignored and pending instances of the signal are discarded. Oth‐
       erwise,	when  the  signal occurs further occurrences of the signal are
       automatically blocked and func is called.

       A return from the function unblocks the handled	signal	and  continues
       the process at the point it was interrupted.

       If  a  caught  signal occurs during certain functions,  terminating the
       call prematurely, the call is automatically  restarted.	In  particular
       this can occur during a read(2) or write(2) on a slow device (such as a
       terminal; but not a file) and during a wait(3C).

       The value of signal() is the previous (or initial) value	 of  func  for
       the particular signal.

       After a fork(2) or vfork(2) the child inherits all signals.  An exec(2)
       resets all caught signals to the default action; ignored signals remain
       ignored.

RETURN VALUES
       The  previous  action is returned on a successful call. Otherwise,−1 is
       returned and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       signal() will fail and no action	 will  take  place  if	the  following
       occurs:

       EINVAL	 sig is not a valid signal number, or is SIGKILL or SIGSTOP.

SEE ALSO
       cc(1B),	 kill(1),  exec(2),  fcntl(2),	fork(2),  getitimer(2),	 getr‐
       limit(2),  kill(2),   read(2),	sigaction(2),	write(2),   abort(3C),
       ptrace(3C),  setjmp(3C), setjmp(3UCB), sigblock(3UCB), signal(3C), sig‐
       nal.h(3HEAD),  sigstack(3UCB),  sigvec(3UCB),   wait(3C),   wait(3UCB),
       termio(7I)

NOTES
       Use of these interfaces should be restricted to only applications writ‐
       ten on BSD platforms.  Use of these interfaces with any of  the	system
       libraries or in multi-threaded applications is unsupported.

       The handler routine func can be declared:

	 void handler(signum) int signum;

       Here  signum  is	 the signal number. See sigvec(3UCB) for more informa‐
       tion.

SunOS 5.10			  30 Oct 2007			  signal(3UCB)
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