1// Copyright 2015 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
2// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
3// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
4
5/*
6Package signal implements access to incoming signals.
7
8Signals are primarily used on Unix-like systems. For the use of this
9package on Windows and Plan 9, see below.
10
11Types of signals
12
13The signals SIGKILL and SIGSTOP may not be caught by a program, and
14therefore cannot be affected by this package.
15
16Synchronous signals are signals triggered by errors in program
17execution: SIGBUS, SIGFPE, and SIGSEGV. These are only considered
18synchronous when caused by program execution, not when sent using
19os.Process.Kill or the kill program or some similar mechanism. In
20general, except as discussed below, Go programs will convert a
21synchronous signal into a run-time panic.
22
23The remaining signals are asynchronous signals. They are not
24triggered by program errors, but are instead sent from the kernel or
25from some other program.
26
27Of the asynchronous signals, the SIGHUP signal is sent when a program
28loses its controlling terminal. The SIGINT signal is sent when the
29user at the controlling terminal presses the interrupt character,
30which by default is ^C (Control-C). The SIGQUIT signal is sent when
31the user at the controlling terminal presses the quit character, which
32by default is ^\ (Control-Backslash). In general you can cause a
33program to simply exit by pressing ^C, and you can cause it to exit
34with a stack dump by pressing ^\.
35
36Default behavior of signals in Go programs
37
38By default, a synchronous signal is converted into a run-time panic. A
39SIGHUP, SIGINT, or SIGTERM signal causes the program to exit. A
40SIGQUIT, SIGILL, SIGTRAP, SIGABRT, SIGSTKFLT, SIGEMT, or SIGSYS signal
41causes the program to exit with a stack dump. A SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, or
42SIGTTOU signal gets the system default behavior (these signals are
43used by the shell for job control). The SIGPROF signal is handled
44directly by the Go runtime to implement runtime.CPUProfile. Other
45signals will be caught but no action will be taken.
46
47If the Go program is started with either SIGHUP or SIGINT ignored
48(signal handler set to SIG_IGN), they will remain ignored.
49
50If the Go program is started with a non-empty signal mask, that will
51generally be honored. However, some signals are explicitly unblocked:
52the synchronous signals, SIGILL, SIGTRAP, SIGSTKFLT, SIGCHLD, SIGPROF,
53and, on GNU/Linux, signals 32 (SIGCANCEL) and 33 (SIGSETXID)
54(SIGCANCEL and SIGSETXID are used internally by glibc). Subprocesses
55started by os.Exec, or by the os/exec package, will inherit the
56modified signal mask.
57
58Changing the behavior of signals in Go programs
59
60The functions in this package allow a program to change the way Go
61programs handle signals.
62
63Notify disables the default behavior for a given set of asynchronous
64signals and instead delivers them over one or more registered
65channels. Specifically, it applies to the signals SIGHUP, SIGINT,
66SIGQUIT, SIGABRT, and SIGTERM. It also applies to the job control
67signals SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, and SIGTTOU, in which case the system
68default behavior does not occur. It also applies to some signals that
69otherwise cause no action: SIGUSR1, SIGUSR2, SIGPIPE, SIGALRM,
70SIGCHLD, SIGCONT, SIGURG, SIGXCPU, SIGXFSZ, SIGVTALRM, SIGWINCH,
71SIGIO, SIGPWR, SIGSYS, SIGINFO, SIGTHR, SIGWAITING, SIGLWP, SIGFREEZE,
72SIGTHAW, SIGLOST, SIGXRES, SIGJVM1, SIGJVM2, and any real time signals
73used on the system. Note that not all of these signals are available
74on all systems.
75
76If the program was started with SIGHUP or SIGINT ignored, and Notify
77is called for either signal, a signal handler will be installed for
78that signal and it will no longer be ignored. If, later, Reset or
79Ignore is called for that signal, or Stop is called on all channels
80passed to Notify for that signal, the signal will once again be
81ignored. Reset will restore the system default behavior for the
82signal, while Ignore will cause the system to ignore the signal
83entirely.
84
85If the program is started with a non-empty signal mask, some signals
86will be explicitly unblocked as described above. If Notify is called
87for a blocked signal, it will be unblocked. If, later, Reset is
88called for that signal, or Stop is called on all channels passed to
89Notify for that signal, the signal will once again be blocked.
90
91SIGPIPE
92
93When a Go program writes to a broken pipe, the kernel will raise a
94SIGPIPE signal.
95
96If the program has not called Notify to receive SIGPIPE signals, then
97the behavior depends on the file descriptor number. A write to a
98broken pipe on file descriptors 1 or 2 (standard output or standard
99error) will cause the program to exit with a SIGPIPE signal. A write
100to a broken pipe on some other file descriptor will take no action on
101the SIGPIPE signal, and the write will fail with an EPIPE error.
102
103If the program has called Notify to receive SIGPIPE signals, the file
104descriptor number does not matter. The SIGPIPE signal will be
105delivered to the Notify channel, and the write will fail with an EPIPE
106error.
107
108This means that, by default, command line programs will behave like
109typical Unix command line programs, while other programs will not
110crash with SIGPIPE when writing to a closed network connection.
111
112Go programs that use cgo or SWIG
113
114In a Go program that includes non-Go code, typically C/C++ code
115accessed using cgo or SWIG, Go's startup code normally runs first. It
116configures the signal handlers as expected by the Go runtime, before
117the non-Go startup code runs. If the non-Go startup code wishes to
118install its own signal handlers, it must take certain steps to keep Go
119working well. This section documents those steps and the overall
120effect changes to signal handler settings by the non-Go code can have
121on Go programs. In rare cases, the non-Go code may run before the Go
122code, in which case the next section also applies.
123
124If the non-Go code called by the Go program does not change any signal
125handlers or masks, then the behavior is the same as for a pure Go
126program.
127
128If the non-Go code installs any signal handlers, it must use the
129SA_ONSTACK flag with sigaction. Failing to do so is likely to cause
130the program to crash if the signal is received. Go programs routinely
131run with a limited stack, and therefore set up an alternate signal
132stack. Also, the Go standard library expects that any signal handlers
133will use the SA_RESTART flag. Failing to do so may cause some library
134calls to return "interrupted system call" errors.
135
136If the non-Go code installs a signal handler for any of the
137synchronous signals (SIGBUS, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV), then it should record
138the existing Go signal handler. If those signals occur while
139executing Go code, it should invoke the Go signal handler (whether the
140signal occurs while executing Go code can be determined by looking at
141the PC passed to the signal handler). Otherwise some Go run-time
142panics will not occur as expected.
143
144If the non-Go code installs a signal handler for any of the
145asynchronous signals, it may invoke the Go signal handler or not as it
146chooses. Naturally, if it does not invoke the Go signal handler, the
147Go behavior described above will not occur. This can be an issue with
148the SIGPROF signal in particular.
149
150The non-Go code should not change the signal mask on any threads
151created by the Go runtime. If the non-Go code starts new threads of
152its own, it may set the signal mask as it pleases.
153
154If the non-Go code starts a new thread, changes the signal mask, and
155then invokes a Go function in that thread, the Go runtime will
156automatically unblock certain signals: the synchronous signals,
157SIGILL, SIGTRAP, SIGSTKFLT, SIGCHLD, SIGPROF, SIGCANCEL, and
158SIGSETXID. When the Go function returns, the non-Go signal mask will
159be restored.
160
161If the Go signal handler is invoked on a non-Go thread not running Go
162code, the handler generally forwards the signal to the non-Go code, as
163follows. If the signal is SIGPROF, the Go handler does
164nothing. Otherwise, the Go handler removes itself, unblocks the
165signal, and raises it again, to invoke any non-Go handler or default
166system handler. If the program does not exit, the Go handler then
167reinstalls itself and continues execution of the program.
168
169Non-Go programs that call Go code
170
171When Go code is built with options like -buildmode=c-shared, it will
172be run as part of an existing non-Go program. The non-Go code may
173have already installed signal handlers when the Go code starts (that
174may also happen in unusual cases when using cgo or SWIG; in that case,
175the discussion here applies).  For -buildmode=c-archive the Go runtime
176will initialize signals at global constructor time.  For
177-buildmode=c-shared the Go runtime will initialize signals when the
178shared library is loaded.
179
180If the Go runtime sees an existing signal handler for the SIGCANCEL or
181SIGSETXID signals (which are used only on GNU/Linux), it will turn on
182the SA_ONSTACK flag and otherwise keep the signal handler.
183
184For the synchronous signals and SIGPIPE, the Go runtime will install a
185signal handler. It will save any existing signal handler. If a
186synchronous signal arrives while executing non-Go code, the Go runtime
187will invoke the existing signal handler instead of the Go signal
188handler.
189
190Go code built with -buildmode=c-archive or -buildmode=c-shared will
191not install any other signal handlers by default. If there is an
192existing signal handler, the Go runtime will turn on the SA_ONSTACK
193flag and otherwise keep the signal handler. If Notify is called for an
194asynchronous signal, a Go signal handler will be installed for that
195signal. If, later, Reset is called for that signal, the original
196handling for that signal will be reinstalled, restoring the non-Go
197signal handler if any.
198
199Go code built without -buildmode=c-archive or -buildmode=c-shared will
200install a signal handler for the asynchronous signals listed above,
201and save any existing signal handler. If a signal is delivered to a
202non-Go thread, it will act as described above, except that if there is
203an existing non-Go signal handler, that handler will be installed
204before raising the signal.
205
206Windows
207
208On Windows a ^C (Control-C) or ^BREAK (Control-Break) normally cause
209the program to exit. If Notify is called for os.Interrupt, ^C or ^BREAK
210will cause os.Interrupt to be sent on the channel, and the program will
211not exit. If Reset is called, or Stop is called on all channels passed
212to Notify, then the default behavior will be restored.
213
214Additionally, if Notify is called, and Windows sends CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT,
215CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT or CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT to the process, Notify will
216return syscall.SIGTERM. Unlike Control-C and Control-Break, Notify does
217not change process behavior when either CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT,
218CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT or CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT is received - the process will
219still get terminated unless it exits. But receiving syscall.SIGTERM will
220give the process an opportunity to clean up before termination.
221
222Plan 9
223
224On Plan 9, signals have type syscall.Note, which is a string. Calling
225Notify with a syscall.Note will cause that value to be sent on the
226channel when that string is posted as a note.
227
228*/
229package signal
230