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sigstack(3C)		 Standard C Library Functions		  sigstack(3C)

NAME
       sigstack - set and/or get alternate signal stack context

SYNOPSIS
       #include <signal.h>

       int sigstack(struct sigstack *ss, struct sigstack *oss);

DESCRIPTION
       The  sigstack()	function allows the calling process to indicate to the
       system an area of its address space to be used for  processing  signals
       received by the process.

       If  the	ss argument is not a null pointer, it must point to a sigstack
       structure. The length of the  application-supplied  stack  must	be  at
       least  SIGSTKSZ	bytes.	If  the	 alternate signal stack overflows, the
       resulting behavior is undefined.	 (See USAGE below.)

	 ·  The value of the ss_onstack member indicates whether  the  process
	    wants  the system to use an alternate signal stack when delivering
	    signals.

	 ·  The value of the ss_sp member indicates the	 desired  location  of
	    the alternate signal stack area in the process' address space.

	 ·  If the ss argument is a null pointer, the current alternate signal
	    stack context is not changed.

       If the oss argument is not a null pointer,  it  points  to  a  sigstack
       structure  in  which  the  current  alternate  signal  stack context is
       placed.	The value stored in the ss_onstack member of oss will be  non-
       zero  if	 the  process  is  currently executing on the alternate signal
       stack.  If the oss argument is a null pointer,  the  current  alternate
       signal stack context is not returned.

       When  a	signal's  action  indicates  its handler should execute on the
       alternate signal stack (specified by calling sigaction(2)),  sigstack()
       checks  to see if the process is currently executing on that stack.  If
       the process is not currently executing on the alternate	signal	stack,
       the  system  arranges  a	 switch	 to the alternate signal stack for the
       duration of the signal handler's execution.

       After a successful call to one of the  exec  functions,	there  are  no
       alternate signal stacks in the new process image.

RETURN VALUES
       Upon  successful	 completion,  sigstack()  returns  0.	Otherwise,  it
       returns −1 and sets errno to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       The sigstack() function will fail if:

       EPERM	       An attempt was made to modify an active stack.

USAGE
       A portable application, when being written  or  rewritten,  should  use
       sigaltstack(2) instead of sigstack().

       The  direction of stack growth is not indicated in the historical defi‐
       nition of struct sigstack. The only way to portably establish  a	 stack
       pointer	is for the application to determine stack growth direction, or
       to allocate a block of storage and set the stack pointer to the middle.
       sigstack()  may assume that the size of the signal stack is SIGSTKSZ as
       found in <signal.h>. An application that would like to specify a signal
       stack size other than SIGSTKSZ should use sigaltstack(2).

       Applications  should not use longjmp(3C) to leave a signal handler that
       is running on a stack established with sigstack(). Doing so may disable
       future  use  of the signal stack.  For abnormal exit from a signal han‐
       dler, siglongjmp(3C), setcontext(2), or swapcontext(3C)	may  be	 used.
       These functions fully support switching from one stack to another.

       The  sigstack()	function requires the application to have knowledge of
       the underlying system's stack architecture.  For this  reason,  sigalt‐
       stack(2) is recommended over this function.

SEE ALSO
       fork(2),	 _longjmp(3C),	longjmp(3C),  setjmp(3C), sigaltstack(2), sig‐
       longjmp(3C), sigsetjmp(3C)

SunOS 5.10			  28 Feb 1996			  sigstack(3C)
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