blob: 7de17abfc9eeb8a00ea89eee72c79a7320d3c223 [file] [log] [blame]
/*
* Asynchronous signal delivery functions.
*
* Copyright 2000-2009 Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
* 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
*/
#include <signal.h>
#include <proto/signal.h>
#include <proto/log.h>
/* Principle : we keep an in-order list of the first occurrence of all received
* signals. All occurrences of a same signal are grouped though. The signal
* queue does not need to be deeper than the number of signals we can handle.
* The handlers will be called asynchronously with the signal number. They can
* check themselves the number of calls by checking the descriptor this signal.
*/
int signal_queue_len; /* length of signal queue, <= MAX_SIGNAL (1 entry per signal max) */
int signal_queue[MAX_SIGNAL]; /* in-order queue of received signals */
struct signal_descriptor signal_state[MAX_SIGNAL];
sigset_t blocked_sig;
void signal_init()
{
signal_queue_len = 0;
memset(signal_queue, 0, sizeof(signal_queue));
memset(signal_state, 0, sizeof(signal_state));
sigfillset(&blocked_sig);
}
void signal_handler(int sig)
{
if (sig < 0 || sig > MAX_SIGNAL || !signal_state[sig].handler) {
/* unhandled signal */
qfprintf(stderr, "Received unhandled signal %d. Signal has been disabled.\n", sig);
signal(sig, SIG_IGN);
return;
}
if (!signal_state[sig].count) {
/* signal was not queued yet */
if (signal_queue_len < MAX_SIGNAL)
signal_queue[signal_queue_len++] = sig;
else
qfprintf(stderr, "Signal %d : signal queue is unexpectedly full.\n", sig);
}
signal_state[sig].count++;
signal(sig, signal_handler); /* re-arm signal */
}
/* Register a handler for signal <sig>. Set it to NULL, SIG_DFL or SIG_IGN to
* remove the handler. The signal's queue is flushed and the signal is really
* registered (or unregistered) for the process. The interface is the same as
* for standard signal delivery, except that the handler does not need to rearm
* the signal itself (it can disable it however).
*/
void signal_register(int sig, void (*handler)(int))
{
if (sig < 0 || sig > MAX_SIGNAL) {
qfprintf(stderr, "Failed to register signal %d : out of range [0..%d].\n", sig, MAX_SIGNAL);
return;
}
signal_state[sig].count = 0;
if (handler == NULL)
handler = SIG_IGN;
if (handler != SIG_IGN && handler != SIG_DFL) {
signal_state[sig].handler = handler;
signal(sig, signal_handler);
}
else {
signal_state[sig].handler = NULL;
signal(sig, handler);
}
}
/* Call handlers of all pending signals and clear counts and queue length. The
* handlers may unregister themselves by calling signal_register() while they
* are called, just like it is done with normal signal handlers.
* Note that it is more efficient to call the inline version which checks the
* queue length before getting here.
*/
void __signal_process_queue()
{
int sig, cur_pos = 0;
struct signal_descriptor *desc;
sigset_t old_sig;
/* block signal delivery during processing */
sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &blocked_sig, &old_sig);
for (cur_pos = 0; cur_pos < signal_queue_len; cur_pos++) {
sig = signal_queue[cur_pos];
desc = &signal_state[sig];
if (desc->count) {
if (desc->handler)
desc->handler(sig);
desc->count = 0;
}
}
signal_queue_len = 0;
/* restore signal delivery */
sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &old_sig, NULL);
}