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siginterrupt(2)

HP-UX 11i Version 3: February 2007
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NAME

siginterrupt — allow signals to interrupt functions

SYNOPSIS

#include <signal.h>

int siginterrupt(int sig, int flag);

DESCRIPTION

The siginterrupt() function is used to change the restart behaviour when a function is interrupted by the specified signal. The function siginterrupt(sig, flag) has an effect as if implemented as:

siginterrupt(int sig, int flag) { int ret; struct sigaction act; (void) sigaction(sig, NULL, &act); if (flag) act.sa_flags &= ~SA_RESTART; else act.sa_flags |= SA_RESTART; ret = sigaction(sig, &act, NULL); return ret; }

RETURN VALUE

Upon successful completion, siginterrupt() returns 0. Otherwise -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

The siginterrupt() function will fail if:

[EINVAL]

The sig argument is not a valid signal number.

APPLICATION USAGE

The siginterrupt() function supports programs written to historical system interfaces. A portable application, when being written or rewritten, should use sigaction() with the SA_RESTART flag instead of siginterrupt().

Threads Considerations

System call restart is a process attribute. Therefore, changing the restart behavior affects all threads in the process.

SEE ALSO

sigaction(2), <signal.h>.

CHANGE HISTORY

First released in Issue 4, Version 2.

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