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- <CENTER><H2>Proper handling of SIGINT/SIGQUIT</H2></CENTER>
- <img src=linie.png width="100%" alt=" ">
- <P>
- <table border=1 cellpadding=4>
- <tr><th valign=top align=left>Abstract: </th>
- <td valign=top align=left>
- In UNIX terminal sessions, you usually have a key like
- <code>C-c</code> (Control-C) to immediately end whatever program you
- have running in the foreground. This should work even when the program
- you called has called other programs in turn. Everything should be
- aborted, giving you your command prompt back, no matter how deep the
- call stack is.
- <p>Basically, it's trivial. But the existence of interactive
- applications that use SIGINT and/or SIGQUIT for other purposes than a
- complete immediate abort make matters complicated, and - as was to
- expect - left us with several ways to solve the problems. Of course,
- existing shells and applications follow different ways.
- <P>This Web pages outlines different ways to solve the problem and
- argues that only one of them can do everything right, although it
- means that we have to fix some existing software.
- </td></tr><tr><th valign=top align=left>Intended audience: </th>
- <td valign=top align=left>Programmers who implement programs that catch SIGINT/SIGQUIT.
- <BR>Programmers who implements shells or shell-like programs that
- execute batches of programs.
- <p>Users who have problems problems getting rid of runaway shell
- scripts using <code>Control-C</code>. Or have interactive applications
- that don't behave right when sending SIGINT. Examples are emacs'es
- that die on Control-g or shellscript statements that sometimes are
- executed and sometimes not, apparently not determined by the user's
- intention.
- </td></tr><tr><th valign=top align=left>Required knowledge: </th>
- <td valign=top align=left>You have to know what it means to catch SIGINT or SIGQUIT and how
- processes are waiting for other processes (children) they spawned.
- </td></tr></table>
- <img src=linie.png width="100%" alt=" ">
- <H3>Basic concepts</H3>
- What technically happens when you press Control-C is that all programs
- running in the foreground in your current terminal (or virtual
- terminal) get the signal SIGINT sent.
- <p>You may change the key that triggers the signal using
- <code>stty</code> and running programs may remap the SIGINT-sending
- key at any time they like, without your intervention and without
- asking you first.
- <p>The usual reaction of a running program to SIGINT is to exit.
- However, not all program do an exit on SIGINT, programs are free to
- use the signal for other actions or to ignore it at all.
- <p>All programs running in the foreground receive the signal. This may
- be a nested "stack" of programs: You started a program that started
- another and the outer is waiting for the inner to exit. This nesting
- may be arbitrarily deep.
- <p>The innermost program is the one that decides what to do on SIGINT.
- It may exit, do something else or do nothing. Still, when the user hit
- SIGINT, all the outer programs are awaken, get the signal and may
- react on it.
- <H3>What we try to achieve</H3>
- The problem is with shell scripts (or similar programs that call
- several subprograms one after another).
- <p>Let us consider the most basic script:
- <PRE>
- #! /bin/sh
- program1
- program2
- </PRE>
- and the usual run looks like this:
- <PRE>
- $ sh myscript
- [output of program1]
- [output of program2]
- $
- </PRE>
- <p>Let us assume that both programs do nothing special on SIGINT, they
- just exit.
- <p>Now imagine the user hits C-c while a shellscript is executing its
- first program. The following programs receive SIGINT: program1 and
- also the shell executing the script. program1 exits.
- <p>But what should the shell do? If we say that it is only the
- innermost's programs business to react on SIGINT, the shell will do
- nothing special (not exit) and it will continue the execution of the
- script and run program2. But this is wrong: The user's intention in
- hitting C-c is to abort the whole script, to get his prompt back. If
- he hits C-c while the first program is running, he does not want
- program2 to be even started.
- <p>here is what would happen if the shell doesn't do anything:
- <PRE>
- $ sh myscript
- [first half of program1's output]
- C-c [users presses C-c]
- [second half of program1's output will not be displayed]
- [output of program2 will appear]
- </PRE>
- <p>Consider a more annoying example:
- <pre>
- #! /bin/sh
- # let's assume there are 300 *.dat files
- for file in *.dat ; do
- dat2ascii $dat
- done
- </pre>
- If your shell wouldn't end if the user hits <code>C-c</code>,
- <code>C-c</code> would just end <strong>one</strong> dat2ascii run and
- the script would continue. Thus, you had to hit <code>C-c</code> up to
- 300 times to end this script.
- <H3>Alternatives to do so</H3>
- <p>There are several ways to handle abortion of shell scripts when
- SIGINT is received while a foreground child runs:
- <menu>
- <li>As just outlined, the shellscript may just continue, ignoring the
- fact that the user hit <code>C-c</code>. That way, your shellscript -
- including any loops - would continue and you had no chance of aborting
- it except using the kill command after finding out the outermost
- shell's PID. This "solution" will not be discussed further, as it is
- obviously not desirable.
- <p><li>The shell itself exits immediately when it receives SIGINT. Not
- only the program called will exit, but the calling (the
- script-executing) shell. The first variant is to exit the shell (and
- therefore discontinuing execution of the script) immediately, while
- the background program may still be executing (remember that although
- the shell is just waiting for the called program to exit, it is woken
- up and may act). I will call the way of doing things the "IUE" (for
- "immediate unconditional exit") for the rest of this document.
- <p><li>As a variant of the former, when the shell receives SIGINT
- while it is waiting for a child to exit, the shell does not exit
- immediately. but it remembers the fact that a SIGINT happened. After
- the called program exits and the shell's wait ends, the shell will
- exit itself and hence discontinue the script. I will call the way of
- doing things the "WUE" (for "wait and unconditional exit") for the
- rest of this document.
- <p><li>There is also a way that the calling shell can tell whether the
- called program exited on SIGINT and if it ignored SIGINT (or used it
- for other purposes). As in the <sl>WUE</sl> way, the shell waits for
- the child to complete. It figures whether the program was ended on
- SIGINT and if so, it discontinue the script. If the program did any
- other exit, the script will be continued. I will call the way of doing
- things the "WCE" (for "wait and cooperative exit") for the rest of
- this document.
- </menu>
- <H3>The problem</H3>
- On first sight, all three solutions (IUE, WUE and WCE) all seem to do
- what we want: If C-c is hit while the first program of the shell
- script runs, the script is discontinued. The user gets his prompt back
- immediately. So what are the difference between these way of handling
- SIGINT?
- <p>There are programs that use the signal SIGINT for other purposes
- than exiting. They use it as a normal keystroke. The user is expected
- to use the key that sends SIGINT during a perfectly normal program
- run. As a result, the user sends SIGINT in situations where he/she
- does not want the program or the script to end.
- <p>The primary example is the emacs editor: C-g does what ESC does in
- other applications: It cancels a partially executed or prepared
- operation. Technically, emacs remaps the key that sends SIGINT from
- C-c to C-g and catches SIGINT.
- <p>Remember that the SIGINT is sent to all programs running in the
- foreground. If emacs is executing from a shell script, both emacs and
- the shell get SIGINT. emacs is the program that decides what to do:
- Exit on SIGINT or not. emacs decides not to exit. The problem arises
- when the shell draws its own conclusions from receiving SIGINT without
- consulting emacs for its opinion.
- <p>Consider this script:
- <PRE>
- #! /bin/sh
- emacs /tmp/foo
- cp /tmp/foo /home/user/mail/sent
- </PRE>
- <p>If C-g is used in emacs, both the shell and emacs will received
- SIGINT. Emacs will not exit, the user used C-g as a normal editing
- keystroke, he/she does not want the script to be aborted on C-g.
- <p>The central problem is that the second command (cp) may
- unintentionally be killed when the shell draws its own conclusion
- about the user's intention. The innermost program is the only one to
- judge.
- <H3>One more example</H3>
- <p>Imagine a mail session using a curses mailer in a tty. You called
- your mailer and started to compose a message. Your mailer calls emacs.
- <code>C-g</code> is a normal editing key in emacs. Technically it
- sends SIGINT (it was <code>C-c</code>, but emacs remapped the key) to
- <menu>
- <li>emacs
- <li>the shell between your mailer and emacs, the one from your mailers
- system("emacs /tmp/bla.44") command
- <li>the mailer itself
- <li>possibly another shell if your mailer was called by a shell script
- or from another application using system(3)
- <li>your interactive shell (which ignores it since it is interactive
- and hence is not relevant to this discussion)
- </menu>
- <p>If everyone just exits on SIGINT, you will be left with nothing but
- your login shell, without asking.
- <p>But for sure you don't want to be dropped out of your editor and
- out of your mailer back to the commandline, having your edited data
- and mailer status deleted.
- <p>Understand the difference: While <code>C-g</code> is used an a kind
- of abort key in emacs, it isn't the major "abort everything" key. When
- you use <code>C-g</code> in emacs, you want to end some internal emacs
- command. You don't want your whole emacs and mailer session to end.
- <p>So, if the shell exits immediately if the user sends SIGINT (the
- second of the four ways shown above), the parent of emacs would die,
- leaving emacs without the controlling tty. The user will lose it's
- editing session immediately and unrecoverable. If the "main" shell of
- the operating system defaults to this behavior, every editor session
- that is spawned from a mailer or such will break (because it is
- usually executed by system(3), which calls /bin/sh). This was the case
- in FreeBSD before I and Bruce Evans changed it in 1998.
- <p>If the shell recognized that SIGINT was sent and exits after the
- current foreground process exited (the third way of the four), the
- editor session will not be disturbed, but things will still not work
- right.
- <H3>A further look at the alternatives</H3>
- <p>Still considering this script to examine the shell's actions in the
- IUE, WUE and ICE way of handling SIGINT:
- <PRE>
- #! /bin/sh
- emacs /tmp/foo
- cp /tmp/foo /home/user/mail/sent
- </PRE>
- <p>The IUE ("immediate unconditional exit") way does not work at all:
- emacs wants to survive the SIGINT (it's a normal editing key for
- emacs), but its parent shell unconditionally thinks "We received
- SIGINT. Abort everything. Now.". The shell will exit even before emacs
- exits. But this will leave emacs in an unusable state, since the death
- of its calling shell will leave it without required resources (file
- descriptors). This way does not work at all for shellscripts that call
- programs that use SIGINT for other purposes than immediate exit. Even
- for programs that exit on SIGINT, but want to do some cleanup between
- the signal and the exit, may fail before they complete their cleanup.
- <p>It should be noted that this way has one advantage: If a child
- blocks SIGINT and does not exit at all, this way will get control back
- to the user's terminal. Since such programs should be banned from your
- system anyway, I don't think that weighs against the disadvantages.
- <p>WUE ("wait and unconditional exit") is a little more clever: If C-g
- was used in emacs, the shell will get SIGINT. It will not immediately
- exit, but remember the fact that a SIGINT happened. When emacs ends
- (maybe a long time after the SIGINT), it will say "Ok, a SIGINT
- happened sometime while the child was executing, the user wants the
- script to be discontinued". It will then exit. The cp will not be
- executed. But that's bad. The "cp" will be executed when the emacs
- session ended without the C-g key ever used, but it will not be
- executed when the user used C-g at least one time. That is clearly not
- desired. Since C-g is a normal editing key in emacs, the user expects
- the rest of the script to behave identically no matter what keys he
- used.
- <p>As a result, the "WUE" way is better than the "IUE" way in that it
- does not break SIGINT-using programs completely. The emacs session
- will end undisturbed. But it still does not support scripts where
- other actions should be performed after a program that use SIGINT for
- non-exit purposes. Since the behavior is basically undeterminable for
- the user, this can lead to nasty surprises.
- <p>The "WCE" way fixes this by "asking" the called program whether it
- exited on SIGINT or not. While emacs receives SIGINT, it does not exit
- on it and a calling shell waiting for its exit will not be told that
- it exited on SIGINT. (Although it receives SIGINT at some point in
- time, the system does not enforce that emacs will exit with
- "I-exited-on-SIGINT" status. This is under emacs' control, see below).
- <p>this still work for the normal script without SIGINT-using
- programs:</p>
- <PRE>
- #! /bin/sh
- program1
- program2
- </PRE>
- Unless program1 and program2 mess around with signal handling, the
- system will tell the calling shell whether the programs exited
- normally or as a result of SIGINT.
- <p>The "WCE" way then has an easy way to things right: When one called
- program exited with "I-exited-on-SIGINT" status, it will discontinue
- the script after this program. If the program ends without this
- status, the next command in the script is started.
- <p>It is important to understand that a shell in "WCE" modus does not
- need to listen to the SIGINT signal at all. Both in the
- "emacs-then-cp" script and in the "several-normal-programs" script, it
- will be woken up and receive SIGINT when the user hits the
- corresponding key. But the shell does not need to react on this event
- and it doesn't need to remember the event of any SIGINT, either.
- Telling whether the user wants to end a script is done by asking that
- program that has to decide, that program that interprets keystrokes
- from the user, the innermost program.
- <H3>So everything is well with WCE?</H3>
- Well, almost.
- <p>The problem with the "WCE" modus is that there are broken programs
- that do not properly communicate the required information up to the
- calling program.
- <p>Unless a program messes with signal handling, the system does this
- automatically.
- <p>There are programs that want to exit on SIGINT, but they don't let
- the system do the automatic exit, because they want to do some
- cleanup. To do so, they catch SIGINT, do the cleanup and then exit by
- themselves.
- <p>And here is where the problem arises: Once they catch the signal,
- the system will no longer communicate the "I-exited-on-SIGINT" status
- to the calling program automatically. Even if the program exit
- immediately in the signal handler of SIGINT. Once it catches the
- signal, it has to take care of communicating the signal status
- itself.
- <p>Some programs don't do this. On SIGINT, they do cleanup and exit
- immediately, but the calling shell isn't told about the non-normal exit
- and it will call the next program in the script.
- <p>As a result, the user hits SIGINT and while one program exits, the
- shellscript continues. To him/her it looks like the shell fails to
- obey to his abortion command.
- <p>Both IUE or WUE shell would not have this problem, since they
- discontinue the script on their own. But as I said, they don't support
- programs using SIGINT for non-exiting purposes, no matter whether
- these programs properly communicate their signal status to the calling
- shell or not.
- <p>Since some shell in wide use implement the WUE way (and some even
- IUE), there is a considerable number of broken programs out there that
- break WCE shells. The programmers just don't recognize it if their
- shell isn't WCE.
- <H3>How to be a proper program</H3>
- <p>(Short note in advance: What you need to achieve is that
- WIFSIGNALED(status) is true in the calling program and that
- WTERMSIG(status) returns SIGINT.)
- <p>If you don't catch SIGINT, the system automatically does the right
- thing for you: Your program exits and the calling program gets the
- right "I-exited-on-SIGINT" status after waiting for your exit.
- <p>But once you catch SIGINT, you have to act.
- <p>Decide whether the SIGINT is used for exit/abort purposes and hence
- a shellscript calling this program should discontinue. This is
- hopefully obvious. If you just need to do some cleanup on SIGINT, but
- then exit immediately, the answer is "yes".
- <p>If so, you have to tell the calling program about it by exiting
- with the "I-exited-on-SIGINT" status.
- <p>There is no other way of doing this than to kill yourself with a
- SIGINT signal. Do it by resetting the SIGINT handler to SIG_DFL, then
- send yourself the signal.
- <PRE>
- void sigint_handler(int sig)
- {
- <do some cleanup>
- signal(SIGINT, SIG_DFL);
- kill(getpid(), SIGINT);
- }
- </PRE>
- Notes:
- <MENU>
- <LI>You cannot "fake" the proper exit status by an exit(3) with a
- special numeric value. People often assume this since the manuals for
- shells often list some return value for exactly this. But this is just
- a convention for your shell script. It does not work from one UNIX API
- program to another.
- <P>All that happens is that the shell sets the "$?" variable to a
- special numeric value for the convenience of your script, because your
- script does not have access to the lower-lever UNIX status evaluation
- functions. This is just an agreement between your script and the
- executing shell, it does not have any meaning in other contexts.
- <P><LI>Do not use kill(0, SIGINT) without consulting the manul for
- your OS implementation. I.e. on BSD, this would not send the signal to
- the current process, but to all processes in the group.
- <P><LI>POSIX 1003.1 allows all these calls to appear in signal
- handlers, so it is portable.
- </MENU>
- <p>In a bourne shell script, you can catch signals using the
- <code>trap</code> command. Here, the same as for C programs apply. If
- the intention of SIGINT is to end your program, you have to exit in a
- way that the calling programs "sees" that you have been killed. If
- you don't catch SIGINT, this happened automatically, but of you catch
- SIGINT, i.e. to do cleanup work, you have to end the program by
- killing yourself, not by calling exit.
- <p>Consider this example from FreeBSD's <code>mkdep</code>, which is a
- bourne shell script.
- <pre>
- TMP=_mkdep$$
- trap 'rm -f $TMP ; trap 2 ; kill -2 $$' 1 2 3 13 15
- </pre>
- Yes, you have to do it the hard way. It's even more annoying in shell
- scripts than in C programs since you can't "pre-delete" temporary
- files (which isn't really portable in C, though).
- <P>All this applies to programs in all languages, not only C and
- bourne shell. Every language implementation that lets you catch SIGINT
- should also give you the option to reset the signal and kill yourself.
- <P>It is always desirable to exit the right way, even if you don't
- expect your usual callers to depend on it, some unusual one will come
- along. This proper exit status will be needed for WCE and will not
- hurt when the calling shell uses IUE or WUE.
- <H3>How to be a proper shell</H3>
- All this applies only for the script-executing case. Most shells will
- also have interactive modes where things are different.
- <MENU>
- <LI>Do nothing special when SIGINT appears while you wait for a child.
- You don't even have to remember that one happened.
- <P><LI>Wait for child to exit, get the exit status. Do not truncate it
- to type char.
- <P><LI>Look at WIFSIGNALED(status) and WTERMSIG(status) to tell
- whether the child says "I exited on SIGINT: in my opinion the user
- wants the shellscript to be discontinued".
- <P><LI>If the latter applies, discontinue the script.
- <P><LI>Exit. But since a shellscript may in turn be called by a
- shellscript, you need to make sure that you properly communicate the
- discontinue intention to the calling program. As in any other program
- (see above), do
- <PRE>
- signal(SIGINT, SIG_DFL);
- kill(getpid(), SIGINT);
- </PRE>
- </MENU>
- <H3>Other remarks</H3>
- Although this web page talks about SIGINT only, almost the same issues
- apply to SIGQUIT, including proper exiting by killing yourself after
- catching the signal and proper reaction on the WIFSIGNALED(status)
- value. One notable difference for SIGQUIT is that you have to make
- sure that not the whole call tree dumps core.
- <H3>What to fight</H3>
- Make sure all programs <em>really</em> kill themselves if they react
- to SIGINT or SIGQUIT and intend to abort their operation as a result
- of this signal. Programs that don't use SIGINT/SIGQUIT as a
- termination trigger - but as part of normal operation - don't kill
- themselves, but do a normal exit instead.
- <p>Make sure people understand why you can't fake an exit-on-signal by
- doing exit(...) using any numerical status.
- <p>Make sure you use a shell that behaves right. Especially if you
- develop programs, since it will help seeing problems.
- <H3>Concrete examples how to fix programs:</H3>
- <ul>
- <li>The fix for FreeBSD's
- <A HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/usr.bin/time/time.c.diff?r1=1.10&r2=1.11">time(1)</A>. This fix is the best example, it's quite short and clear and
- it fixes a case where someone tried to fake signal exit status by a
- numerical value. And the complete program is small.
- <p><li>Fix for FreeBSD's
- <A HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/usr.bin/truss/main.c.diff?r1=1.9&r2=1.10">truss(1)</A>.
- <p><li>The fix for FreeBSD's
- <A HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/usr.bin/mkdep/mkdep.gcc.sh.diff?r1=1.8.2.1&r2=1.8.2.2">mkdep(1)</A>, a shell script.
- <p><li>Fix for FreeBSD's make(1), <A HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/usr.bin/make/job.c.diff?r1=1.9&r2=1.10">part 1</A>,
- <A HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/usr.bin/make/compat.c.diff?r1=1.10&r2=1.11">part 2</A>.
- </ul>
- <H3>Testsuite for shells</H3>
- I have a collection of shellscripts that test shells for the
- behavior. See my <A HREF="download/">download dir</A> to get the newest
- "sh-interrupt" files, either as a tarfile or as individual file for
- online browsing. This isn't really documented, besides from the
- comments the scripts echo.
- <H3>Appendix 1 - table of implementation choices</H3>
- <table border cellpadding=2>
- <tr valign=top>
- <th>Method sign</th>
- <th>Does what?</th>
- <th>Example shells that implement it:</th>
- <th>What happens when a shellscript called emacs, the user used
- <code>C-g</code> and the script has additional commands in it?</th>
- <th>What happens when a shellscript called emacs, the user did not use
- <code>C-c</code> and the script has additional commands in it?</th>
- <th>What happens if a non-interactive child catches SIGINT?</th>
- <th>To behave properly, children must do what?</th>
- </tr>
- <tr valign=top align=left>
- <td>IUE</td>
- <td>The shell executing a script exits immediately if it receives
- SIGINT.</td>
- <td>4.4BSD ash (ash), NetBSD, FreeBSD prior to 3.0/22.8</td>
- <td>The editor session is lost and subsequent commands are not
- executed.</td>
- <td>The editor continues as normal and the subsequent commands are
- executed. </td>
- <td>The scripts ends immediately, returning to the caller even before
- the current foreground child of the shell exits. </td>
- <td>It doesn't matter what the child does or how it exits, even if the
- child continues to operate, the shell returns. </td>
- </tr>
- <tr valign=top align=left>
- <td>WUE</td>
- <td>If the shell executing a script received SIGINT while a foreground
- process was running, it will exit after that child's exit.</td>
- <td>pdksh (OpenBSD /bin/sh)</td>
- <td>The editor continues as normal, but subsequent commands from the
- script are not executed.</td>
- <td>The editor continues as normal and subsequent commands are
- executed. </td>
- <td>The scripts returns to its caller after the current foreground
- child exits, no matter how the child exited. </td>
- <td>It doesn't matter how the child exits (signal status or not), but
- if it doesn't return at all, the shell will not return. In no case
- will further commands from the script be executed. </td>
- </tr>
- <tr valign=top align=left>
- <td>WCE</td>
- <td>The shell exits if a child signaled that it was killed on a
- signal (either it had the default handler for SIGINT or it killed
- itself). </td>
- <td>bash (Linux /bin/sh), most commercial /bin/sh, FreeBSD /bin/sh
- from 3.0/2.2.8.</td>
- <td>The editor continues as normal and subsequent commands are
- executed. </td>
- <td>The editor continues as normal and subsequent commands are
- executed. </td>
- <td>The scripts returns to its caller after the current foreground
- child exits, but only if the child exited with signal status. If
- the child did a normal exit (even if it received SIGINT, but catches
- it), the script will continue. </td>
- <td>The child must be implemented right, or the user will not be able
- to break shell scripts reliably.</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- <P><img src=linie.png width="100%" alt=" ">
- <BR>©2005 Martin Cracauer <cracauer @ cons.org>
- <A HREF="http://www.cons.org/cracauer/">http://www.cons.org/cracauer/</A>
- <BR>Last changed: $Date: 2005/02/11 21:44:43 $
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