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os/signal: clarify signal doc
Based on comments from Thomas Bushnell. Update #9896. Change-Id: I603b1382d17dff00b5d18f17f8b5d011503e9e4c Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/18365 Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
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@ -42,17 +42,18 @@ causes the program to exit with a stack dump. A SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, or
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SIGTTOU signal gets the system default behavior (these signals are
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used by the shell for job control). The SIGPROF signal is handled
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directly by the Go runtime to implement runtime.CPUProfile. Other
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signals are ignored.
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signals will be caught but no action will be taken.
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If the Go program is started with either SIGHUP or SIGINT ignored,
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they will remain ignored. Go always registers a handler for the other
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signals.
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If the Go program is started with either SIGHUP or SIGINT ignored
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(signal handler set to SIG_IGN), they will remain ignored.
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If the Go program is started with a non-empty signal mask, that will
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generally be honored. However, some signals are explicitly unblocked:
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the synchronous signals, SIGILL, SIGTRAP, SIGSTKFLT, SIGCHLD, SIGPROF,
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and, on GNU/Linux, signals 32 (SIGCANCEL) and 33 (SIGSETXID)
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(SIGCANCEL and SIGSETXID are used internally by glibc).
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(SIGCANCEL and SIGSETXID are used internally by glibc). Subprocesses
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started by os.Exec, or by the os/exec package, will inherit the
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modified signal mask.
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Changing the behavior of signals in Go programs
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@ -65,12 +66,12 @@ channels. Specifically, it applies to the signals SIGHUP, SIGINT,
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SIGQUIT, SIGABRT, and SIGTERM. It also applies to the job control
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signals SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, and SIGTTOU, in which case the system
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default behavior does not occur. It also applies to some signals that
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are otherwise ignored: SIGUSR1, SIGUSR2, SIGPIPE, SIGALRM, SIGCHLD,
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SIGURG, SIGXCPU, SIGXFSZ, SIGVTALRM, SIGWINCH, SIGIO, SIGPWR, SIGSYS,
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SIGINFO, SIGTHR, SIGWAITING, SIGLWP, SIGFREEZE, SIGTHAW, SIGLOST,
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SIGXRES, SIGJVM1, SIGJVM2, and any real time signals used on the
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system. Note that not all of these signals are available on all
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systems.
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otherwise cause no action: SIGUSR1, SIGUSR2, SIGPIPE, SIGALRM,
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SIGCHLD, SIGCONT, SIGURG, SIGXCPU, SIGXFSZ, SIGVTALRM, SIGWINCH,
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SIGIO, SIGPWR, SIGSYS, SIGINFO, SIGTHR, SIGWAITING, SIGLWP, SIGFREEZE,
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SIGTHAW, SIGLOST, SIGXRES, SIGJVM1, SIGJVM2, and any real time signals
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used on the system. Note that not all of these signals are available
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on all systems.
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If the program was started with SIGHUP or SIGINT ignored, and Notify
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is called for either signal, a signal handler will be installed for
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@ -89,15 +90,24 @@ Notify for that signal, the signal will once again be blocked.
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SIGPIPE
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When a Go program receives an EPIPE error from the kernel while
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writing to file descriptors 1 or 2 (standard output or standard
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error), it will raise a SIGPIPE signal. If the program is not
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currently receiving SIGPIPE via a call to Notify, this will cause the
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program to exit with SIGPIPE. On descriptors other than 1 or 2, the
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write will return the EPIPE error. This means that, by default,
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command line programs will behave like typical Unix command line
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programs, while other programs will not crash with SIGPIPE when
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writing to a closed network connection.
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When a Go program writes to a broken pipe, the kernel will raise a
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SIGPIPE signal.
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If the program has not called Notify to receive SIGPIPE signals, then
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the behavior depends on the file descriptor number. A write to a
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broken pipe on file descriptors 1 or 2 (standard output or standard
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error) will cause the program to exit with a SIGPIPE signal. A write
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to a broken pipe on some other file descriptor will take no action on
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the SIGPIPE signal, and the write will fail with an EPIPE error.
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If the program has called Notify to receive SIGPIPE signals, the file
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descriptor number does not matter. The SIGPIPE signal will be
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delivered to the Notify channel, and the write will fail with an EPIPE
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error.
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This means that, by default, command line programs will behave like
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typical Unix command line programs, while other programs will not
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crash with SIGPIPE when writing to a closed network connection.
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Go programs that use cgo or SWIG
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