Previous: Miscellaneous Signals, Up: Standard Signals
We mentioned above that the shell prints a message describing the signal
that terminated a child process. The clean way to print a message
describing a signal is to use the functions strsignal
and
psignal
. These functions use a signal number to specify which
kind of signal to describe. The signal number may come from the
termination status of a child process (see Process Completion) or it
may come from a signal handler in the same process.
This function returns a pointer to a statically-allocated string containing a message describing the signal signum. You should not modify the contents of this string; and, since it can be rewritten on subsequent calls, you should save a copy of it if you need to reference it later.
This function is a GNU extension, declared in the header file string.h.
This function prints a message describing the signal signum to the standard error output stream
stderr
; see Standard Streams.If you call
psignal
with a message that is either a null pointer or an empty string,psignal
just prints the message corresponding to signum, adding a trailing newline.If you supply a non-null message argument, then
psignal
prefixes its output with this string. It adds a colon and a space character to separate the message from the string corresponding to signum.This function is a BSD feature, declared in the header file signal.h.
There is also an array sys_siglist
which contains the messages
for the various signal codes. This array exists on BSD systems, unlike
strsignal
.