/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * pqsignal.c * reliable BSD-style signal(2) routine stolen from RWW who stole it * from Stevens... * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2021, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * src/port/pqsignal.c * * We now assume that all Unix-oid systems have POSIX sigaction(2) * with support for restartable signals (SA_RESTART). We used to also * support BSD-style signal(2), but there really shouldn't be anything * out there anymore that doesn't have the POSIX API. * * Windows, of course, is resolutely in a class by itself. In the backend, * we don't use this file at all; src/backend/port/win32/signal.c provides * pqsignal() for the backend environment. Frontend programs can use * this version of pqsignal() if they wish, but beware that this does * not provide restartable signals on Windows. * * ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ #include "c.h" #include #if !defined(WIN32) || defined(FRONTEND) /* * Set up a signal handler, with SA_RESTART, for signal "signo" * * Returns the previous handler. */ pqsigfunc pqsignal(int signo, pqsigfunc func) { #ifndef WIN32 struct sigaction act, oact; act.sa_handler = func; sigemptyset(&act.sa_mask); act.sa_flags = SA_RESTART; #ifdef SA_NOCLDSTOP if (signo == SIGCHLD) act.sa_flags |= SA_NOCLDSTOP; #endif if (sigaction(signo, &act, &oact) < 0) return SIG_ERR; return oact.sa_handler; #else /* WIN32 */ return signal(signo, func); #endif } #endif /* !defined(WIN32) || defined(FRONTEND) */