Reputation: 205
I am writing a program that takes a list of UNIX commands from a file and executes them sequentially. To keep everything in order, I must have each command initialized and kept waiting for SIGUSR1
via sigwait()
. When every command is initialized, then every command can execute.
Usage: > program.c input.txt
However, it appears that SIGUSR1 is repeatedly called, completely surpassing sigwait()
. What is going on here? I've tried so many different things, but it's recently modeled after this answer. To rephrase, I want the signal to be raised for commands immediately after initialization. I want the signal to be unblocked when all commands are completely initialized
#include <stdio.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
void on_sigusr1(int sig)
{
// Note: Normally, it's not safe to call almost all library functions in a
// signal handler, since the signal may have been received in a middle of a
// call to that function.
printf("SIGUSR1 received!\n");
}
int main(int arc, char* argv[])
{
FILE *file;
file = fopen(argv[1] ,"r");
int BUF_SIZE = 100;
char *token;
char buffer[BUF_SIZE];
char programs[BUF_SIZE];
char *commands[BUF_SIZE];
int i = 0;
int counter = 1;
while (fgets(buffer, sizeof buffer, file ) != NULL)
{
strcpy(programs, buffer);
int length = strlen(buffer)-1;
if (buffer[length] == '\n')
{
buffer[length] = '\0';
}
i = 0;
token = strtok(buffer," ");
while(token != NULL)
{
commands[i++] = token;
token = strtok(NULL, " ");
}
commands[i] = 0;
pid_t pids[counter];
// Set a signal handler for SIGUSR1
signal(SIGUSR1, &on_sigusr1);
// At program startup, SIGUSR1 is neither blocked nor pending, so raising it
// will call the signal handler
raise(SIGUSR1);
// Now let's block SIGUSR1
sigset_t sigset;
sigemptyset(&sigset);
sigaddset(&sigset, SIGUSR1);
sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &sigset, NULL);
// SIGUSR1 is now blocked, raising it will not call the signal handler
printf("About to raise SIGUSR1\n");
raise(SIGUSR1);
printf("After raising SIGUSR1\n");
for(i = 0; i < counter; ++i)
{
pids[i] = fork();
if(pids[i] > 0)
{
printf("Child process %d ready to execute command %s", getpid(), programs);
// SIGUSR1 is now blocked and pending -- this call to sigwait will return
// immediately
int sig;
int result = sigwait(&sigset, &sig);
if(result == 0) {
printf("Child process %d executing command %s", getpid(), programs);
execvp(commands[0], commands);
}
}
}
// All programs have been launched
for(i = 0; i < counter; ++i)
{
wait(&pids[i]);
}
// All programs are waiting to execute
for (i = 0; i < counter; ++i)
{
// SIGUSR1 is now no longer pending (but still blocked). Raise it again and
// unblock it
raise(SIGUSR1);
printf("About to unblock SIGUSR1\n");
sigprocmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, &sigset, NULL);
printf("Unblocked SIGUSR1\n");
}
}
exit(0);
fclose(file);
return 0;
}
UPDATE: Tried changing signal()
to sigaction()
. No change.
Upvotes: 5
Views: 1261
Reputation: 53
You should consider calling sigwait after checking to see if that pid is a child process.
So maybe put
int sig;
and
int result = sigwait(&sigset, &sig);
within an if statement that checks if the pid is == 0 which would indicate that it is a child. Otherwise you would be sigwaiting a parent process.
If the pid is greater than 0 it's a parent process id and if it's less than zero its an error.
Then for each process in your array of pids you would call kill(pid_array[i], SIGUSR1) to unblock it.
Upvotes: 1