- A signal is used in UNIX systems to notify a process that a particular event has occurred.
- A signal may be received either synchronously or asynchronously, depending on the source of and the reason for the event being signaled.
- A signal is generated by the occurrence of a particular event.
- A generated signal is delivered to a process.
- Once delivered, the signal must be handled.
- Examples of synchronous signals include illegal memory access and division by O. If a running program performs either of these actions, a signal is generated.
- Synchronous signals are delivered to the same process that performed the operation that caused the signal (that is the reason they are considered synchronous).
- When a signal is generated by an event external to a running process, that process receives the signal asynchronously.
- Examples of such signals include terminating a process with specific keystrokes (such as and having a timer expire.
- Typically, an asynchronous signal is sent to another process.
- Every signal may be handled by one of two possible handlers:
- A default signal handler.
- A user-defined signal handler
- Every signal has a default signal handler that is run by the kernel when handling that signal. This default action can be overridden by a user-defined signal handler that is called to handle the signal.
Cem Ozdogan
2010-03-15