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Re: Change in SIGTERM behaviour in bash 4.3 when using readline
From: |
Chet Ramey |
Subject: |
Re: Change in SIGTERM behaviour in bash 4.3 when using readline |
Date: |
Wed, 4 Mar 2020 15:43:26 -0500 |
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Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.14; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.5.0 |
On 3/4/20 2:38 PM, Chris Down wrote:
> Chris Down writes:
>> I'm not quite sure how best to handle this, maybe setting SIG_IGN as the
>> default signal handler for interactive shells if there's nothing to
>> inherit? This is one of those cases where SA_RESTART doesn't quite mimic
>> SIG_IGN...
>
> This seems too simple, so I assume it's going to cause other problems, but:
>
> ---
> jobs.c | 1 +
> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
>
> diff --git a/jobs.c b/jobs.c
> index e157c38f..a57b7082 100644
> --- a/jobs.c
> +++ b/jobs.c
> @@ -4584,6 +4584,7 @@ initialize_job_signals ()
> if (interactive)
> {
> set_signal_handler (SIGINT, sigint_sighandler);
> + set_signal_handler (SIGTERM, SIG_IGN);
This is how the code used to read, before I added the do-nothing signal
handler as a result of
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bash/2013-02/msg00020.html
There is another way to do it by blocking signals, and a comment in the
code indicates that I considered using it for SIGTERM at the time.
Ignoring the signal is what caused the race condition in the first place.
--
``The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.'' - Chaucer
``Ars longa, vita brevis'' - Hippocrates
Chet Ramey, UTech, CWRU chet@case.edu http://tiswww.cwru.edu/~chet/