Node:Checking for Pending Signals, Next:Remembering a Signal, Previous:Blocking for Handler, Up:Blocking Signals
You can find out which signals are pending at any time by calling
sigpending
. This function is declared in signal.h
.
int sigpending (sigset_t *set) | Function |
The sigpending function stores information about pending signals
in set. If there is a pending signal that is blocked from
delivery, then that signal is a member of the returned set. (You can
test whether a particular signal is a member of this set using
sigismember ; see Signal Sets.)
The return value is |
Testing whether a signal is pending is not often useful. Testing when that signal is not blocked is almost certainly bad design.
Here is an example.
#include <signal.h> #include <stddef.h> sigset_t base_mask, waiting_mask; sigemptyset (&base_mask); sigaddset (&base_mask, SIGINT); sigaddset (&base_mask, SIGTSTP); /* Block user interrupts while doing other processing. */ sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, &base_mask, NULL); ... /* After a while, check to see whether any signals are pending. */ sigpending (&waiting_mask); if (sigismember (&waiting_mask, SIGINT)) { /* User has tried to kill the process. */ } else if (sigismember (&waiting_mask, SIGTSTP)) { /* User has tried to stop the process. */ }
Remember that if there is a particular signal pending for your process,
additional signals of that same type that arrive in the meantime might
be discarded. For example, if a SIGINT
signal is pending when
another SIGINT
signal arrives, your program will probably only
see one of them when you unblock this signal.
Portability Note: The sigpending
function is new in
POSIX.1. Older systems have no equivalent facility.