How to prevent SIGPIPEs (or handle them properly) How to prevent SIGPIPEs (or handle them properly) c c

How to prevent SIGPIPEs (or handle them properly)


You generally want to ignore the SIGPIPE and handle the error directly in your code. This is because signal handlers in C have many restrictions on what they can do.

The most portable way to do this is to set the SIGPIPE handler to SIG_IGN. This will prevent any socket or pipe write from causing a SIGPIPE signal.

To ignore the SIGPIPE signal, use the following code:

signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN);

If you're using the send() call, another option is to use the MSG_NOSIGNAL option, which will turn the SIGPIPE behavior off on a per call basis. Note that not all operating systems support the MSG_NOSIGNAL flag.

Lastly, you may also want to consider the SO_SIGNOPIPE socket flag that can be set with setsockopt() on some operating systems. This will prevent SIGPIPE from being caused by writes just to the sockets it is set on.


Another method is to change the socket so it never generates SIGPIPE on write(). This is more convenient in libraries, where you might not want a global signal handler for SIGPIPE.

On most BSD-based (MacOS, FreeBSD...) systems, (assuming you are using C/C++), you can do this with:

int set = 1;setsockopt(sd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_NOSIGPIPE, (void *)&set, sizeof(int));

With this in effect, instead of the SIGPIPE signal being generated, EPIPE will be returned.


I'm super late to the party, but SO_NOSIGPIPE isn't portable, and might not work on your system (it seems to be a BSD thing).

A nice alternative if you're on, say, a Linux system without SO_NOSIGPIPE would be to set the MSG_NOSIGNAL flag on your send(2) call.

Example replacing write(...) by send(...,MSG_NOSIGNAL) (see nobar's comment)

char buf[888];//write( sockfd, buf, sizeof(buf) );send(    sockfd, buf, sizeof(buf), MSG_NOSIGNAL );