> That'd be a limitation. Like you can choose to not handle SEGV, you can > choose to have a signalfd listening to it. Of course, not with the > intention to *handle* the signal, but with a notification intent.
Hrm.. either you handle it or you are dead ... I fail to see how signalfd can sneak in to catch it just at the right time... > > I'm actually thinking we shoud -also- only handle shared signals in > > dequeue_signal() when called from a different task. > > Why do you want to impose this? signalfd is a "sniffer", and the user > controls what it can dequeue/sniff or what not. I don't see a reason of > imposing such limits, unless there're clear technical issues. Well, a synchronous signal such a SIGSEGV, SIGILL or SIGFPE generally means that execution cannot continue unless the signal handler does something about it... I think you are opening a whole can of worms here. > > Well.. you certainly need to instanciate a signalfd for every thread in > > the process if you want to get shared signals for sure. > > Why? Or better, what do you mean for "instanciate"? Well, because the kernel makes the decision of which thread to target the signal for a shared signal at emission time (though it -can- be caught by another thread). /me reads more code to be sure.. Oh well, a read from signalfd created on one thread -will- catch any shared signal that was already pending, whatever thread the kernel decided to target it at, it seems (that is, whatever thread actually got TIF_SIGPENDING set), but will only catch private signals for _that_ thread (and I still think catching private signals is a wrong thing). However, I'm not sure about the wakeup condition. signalfd_deliver will wakeup anybody in the signalfd_list, which is -not- whoever is blocked in signalfd_read() unless I'm missing something. For your scheme to work, signalfd_read() you probably need to keep a separate list of people to be nofified of signals and add current to it from signalfd_list(). Ben. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/