POSIX threads and signals POSIX threads and signals c c

POSIX threads and signals


  • What's the best way to control which thread a signal is delivered to?

As @zoli2k indicated, explicitly nominating a single thread to handle all signals you want handled (or a set of threads each with specific signal responsibilities), is a good technique.

  • What is the best way to tell another thread (that might actually be busy) that the signal has arrived?[...]
  • How can I safely handle passing the information that a signal has occurred to other threads? Does this need to happen in the signal handler?

I won't say "best," but here's my recommendation:

Block all desired signals in main, so that all threads are inherit that signal mask. Then, fashion the special signal receiving thread as a signal-driven event loop, dispatching newly arrived signals as some other intra-thread communication.

The simplest way to do this is to have the thread accept signals in a loop using sigwaitinfo or sigtimedwait. The thread then converts the signals somehow, perhaps broadcasting a pthread_cond_t, waking up other threads with more I/O, enqueuing a command in an application-specific thread-safe queue, whatever.

Alternatively, the special thread could allow signals to be delivered to a signal handler, unmasking for delivery only when ready to handle signals. (Signal delivery via handlers tends to be more error-prone than signal acceptance via the sigwait family, however.) In this case, the receiver's signal handler performs some simple and async-signal-safe action: setting sig_atomic_t flags, calling sigaddset(&signals_i_have_seen_recently, latest_sig), write() a byte to a non-blocking self-pipe, etc. Then, back in its masked main loop, the thread communicates receipt of the signal to other threads as above.

(UPDATED @caf rightly points out that sigwait approaches are superior.)


According to the POSIX standard all threads should appear with the same PID on the system and using pthread_sigmask() you can define the signal blocking mask for every thread.

Since it is allowed to define only one signal handler per PID, I prefer to handle all signals in one thread and send pthread_cancel() if a running thread need to be cancelled. It is the preferred way against pthread_kill() since it allows to define cleanup functions for the threads.

On some older systems, because of the lack of proper kernel support, the running threads may have different PID from the parent thread's PID. See FAQ for signal handling with linuxThreads on Linux 2.4.


Where I'm at so far:

  • Signals come in different major classes, some of which should typically just kill the process anyway (SIGILL) and some of which never need anything doing (SIGIO; easier to just do async IO right anyway). Those two classes need no action.
  • Some signals don't need to be dealt with immediately; the likes of SIGWINCH can be queued up until it is convenient (just like an event from X11).
  • The tricky ones are the ones where you want to respond to them by interrupting what you're doing but without going to the extent of wiping out a thread. In particular, SIGINT in interactive mode ought to leave things responsive.

I've still got to sort through signal vs sigaction, pselect, sigwait, sigaltstack, and a whole bunch of other bits and pieces of POSIX (and non-POSIX) API.