I have a thread in an application that has a loop like this:
...
while (1)
{
checkDatabase();
checkChildren();
sleep(3);
}
...
checkDatabase() is self-explanatory; checkChildren() simply calls waitpid(-1, &status, WNOHANG) to deal with child processes that have either exited or received a signal.
The application works fairly well, but it has default signal handling. The problem is that this parent process has a number of threads (don’t worry about child processes for now) and I don’t have any experience with synchronous signals, let alone in a POSIX threads application. I have used signal() before but apparently it’s non-portable and it doesn’t do what I need anyway. I have no experience at all with sigaction methods, and I can’t find good documentation on how to fill in the structs and so on.
What I need to do is to synchronously catch terminating signals like SIGINT, SIGTERM and SIGQUIT in the above loop (and I need to ignore SIGPIPE altogether so that I can catch the EPIPE error from IO methods), so it would look like this:
...
while (1)
{
checkDatabase();
checkChildren();
checkForSignals();
sleep(3);
}
...
All other threads should not have anything to do with the signal; only the thread that executes this loop should be aware of it. And, obviously, it needs to be a non-blocking check so the loop doesn’t block during its first iteration. The method called if a signal is found will sort out the other threads and destroy mutexes, and all that.
Could anyone please give me a heads-up? Many thanks.
(Following the question’s comments, and for completeness, this solution tries to avoid signal handlers.)
It is possible to block signals from being raised through sigprocmask() (or, rather, pthread_sigmask() since you’re using threads). From there on, the signals that were raised but blocked are available through sigpending().
Therefore, you could do something like (error checking omitted for brevity):
Then, later:
Since
sigpending()does not block, this seems to match your requirements.