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A signal stack is a special area of memory to be used as the execution
stack during signal handlers. It should be fairly large, to avoid any
danger that it will overflow in turn; the macro SIGSTKSZ
is
defined to a canonical size for signal stacks. You can use
malloc
to allocate the space for the stack. Then call
sigaltstack
or sigstack
to tell the system to use that
space for the signal stack.
You don't need to write signal handlers differently in order to use a signal stack. Switching from one stack to the other happens automatically. (Some non-GNU debuggers on some machines may get confused if you examine a stack trace while a handler that uses the signal stack is running.)
There are two interfaces for telling the system to use a separate signal
stack. sigstack
is the older interface, which comes from 4.2
BSD. sigaltstack
is the newer interface, and comes from 4.4
BSD. The sigaltstack
interface has the advantage that it does
not require your program to know which direction the stack grows, which
depends on the specific machine and operating system.
This structure describes a signal stack. It contains the following members:
void *ss_sp
- This points to the base of the signal stack.
size_t ss_size
- This is the size (in bytes) of the signal stack which `ss_sp' points to. You should set this to however much space you allocated for the stack.
There are two macros defined in signal.h that you should use in calculating this size:
SIGSTKSZ
- This is the canonical size for a signal stack. It is judged to be sufficient for normal uses.
MINSIGSTKSZ
- This is the amount of signal stack space the operating system needs just to implement signal delivery. The size of a signal stack must be greater than this.
For most cases, just using
SIGSTKSZ
forss_size
is sufficient. But if you know how much stack space your program's signal handlers will need, you may want to use a different size. In this case, you should allocateMINSIGSTKSZ
additional bytes for the signal stack and increasess_size
accordingly.int ss_flags
- This field contains the bitwise or of these flags:
The
sigaltstack
function specifies an alternate stack for use during signal handling. When a signal is received by the process and its action indicates that the signal stack is used, the system arranges a switch to the currently installed signal stack while the handler for that signal is executed.If oldstack is not a null pointer, information about the currently installed signal stack is returned in the location it points to. If stack is not a null pointer, then this is installed as the new stack for use by signal handlers.
The return value is
0
on success and-1
on failure. Ifsigaltstack
fails, it setserrno
to one of these values:
EINVAL
- You tried to disable a stack that was in fact currently in use.
ENOMEM
- The size of the alternate stack was too small. It must be greater than
MINSIGSTKSZ
.
Here is the older sigstack
interface. You should use
sigaltstack
instead on systems that have it.
This structure describes a signal stack. It contains the following members:
void *ss_sp
- This is the stack pointer. If the stack grows downwards on your machine, this should point to the top of the area you allocated. If the stack grows upwards, it should point to the bottom.
int ss_onstack
- This field is true if the process is currently using this stack.
The
sigstack
function specifies an alternate stack for use during signal handling. When a signal is received by the process and its action indicates that the signal stack is used, the system arranges a switch to the currently installed signal stack while the handler for that signal is executed.If oldstack is not a null pointer, information about the currently installed signal stack is returned in the location it points to. If stack is not a null pointer, then this is installed as the new stack for use by signal handlers.
The return value is
0
on success and-1
on failure.