/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * (c) The GHC Team, 1998-2005 * * Signal processing / handling. * * ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/ #include "PosixSource.h" #include "Rts.h" #include "Schedule.h" #include "RtsSignals.h" #include "Signals.h" #include "RtsUtils.h" #include "Prelude.h" #include "Ticker.h" #include "Stable.h" #include "Libdw.h" #if defined(alpha_HOST_ARCH) # if defined(linux_HOST_OS) # include # else # include # endif #endif #if defined(HAVE_UNISTD_H) # include #endif #if defined(HAVE_SIGNAL_H) # include #endif #if defined(HAVE_ERRNO_H) # include #endif #if defined(HAVE_EVENTFD_H) # include #endif #if defined(HAVE_TERMIOS_H) #include #endif #include #include /* This curious flag is provided for the benefit of the Haskell binding * to POSIX.1 to control whether or not to include SA_NOCLDSTOP when * installing a SIGCHLD handler. */ HsInt nocldstop = 0; /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * The table of signal handlers * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #if defined(RTS_USER_SIGNALS) /* SUP: The type of handlers is a little bit, well, doubtful... */ StgInt *signal_handlers = NULL; /* Dynamically grown array of signal handlers */ static StgInt nHandlers = 0; /* Size of handlers array */ static uint32_t n_haskell_handlers = 0; static sigset_t userSignals; static sigset_t savedSignals; #if defined(THREADED_RTS) static Mutex sig_mutex; // protects signal_handlers, nHandlers #endif /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Initialisation / deinitialisation * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void initUserSignals(void) { sigemptyset(&userSignals); #if defined(THREADED_RTS) initMutex(&sig_mutex); #endif } void freeSignalHandlers(void) { if (signal_handlers != NULL) { stgFree(signal_handlers); signal_handlers = NULL; nHandlers = 0; n_haskell_handlers = 0; } #if defined(THREADED_RTS) closeMutex(&sig_mutex); #endif } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Allocate/resize the table of signal handlers. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void more_handlers(int sig) { StgInt i; if (sig < nHandlers) return; if (signal_handlers == NULL) signal_handlers = (StgInt *)stgMallocBytes((sig + 1) * sizeof(StgInt), "more_handlers"); else signal_handlers = (StgInt *)stgReallocBytes(signal_handlers, (sig + 1) * sizeof(StgInt), "more_handlers"); for(i = nHandlers; i <= sig; i++) // Fill in the new slots with default actions signal_handlers[i] = STG_SIG_DFL; nHandlers = sig + 1; } // Here's the pipe into which we will send our signals static volatile int io_manager_wakeup_fd = -1; static int timer_manager_control_wr_fd = -1; #define IO_MANAGER_WAKEUP 0xff #define IO_MANAGER_DIE 0xfe #define IO_MANAGER_SYNC 0xfd void setTimerManagerControlFd(int fd) { timer_manager_control_wr_fd = fd; } void setIOManagerWakeupFd (int fd) { // only called when THREADED_RTS, but unconditionally // compiled here because GHC.Event.Control depends on it. io_manager_wakeup_fd = fd; } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Wake up at least one IO or timer manager HS thread. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void ioManagerWakeup (void) { int r; // Wake up the IO Manager thread by sending a byte down its pipe if (io_manager_wakeup_fd >= 0) { #if defined(HAVE_EVENTFD) StgWord64 n = (StgWord64)IO_MANAGER_WAKEUP; r = write(io_manager_wakeup_fd, (char *) &n, 8); #else StgWord8 byte = (StgWord8)IO_MANAGER_WAKEUP; r = write(io_manager_wakeup_fd, &byte, 1); #endif /* N.B. If the TimerManager is shutting down as we run this * then there is a possiblity that our first read of * io_manager_wakeup_fd is non-negative, but before we get to the * write the file is closed. If this occurs, io_manager_wakeup_fd * will be written into with -1 (GHC.Event.Control does this prior * to closing), so checking this allows us to distinguish this case. * To ensure we observe the correct ordering, we declare the * io_manager_wakeup_fd as volatile. * Since this is not an error condition, we do not print the error * message in this case. */ if (r == -1 && io_manager_wakeup_fd >= 0) { sysErrorBelch("ioManagerWakeup: write"); } } } #if defined(THREADED_RTS) void ioManagerDie (void) { StgWord8 byte = (StgWord8)IO_MANAGER_DIE; uint32_t i; int fd; int r; if (0 <= timer_manager_control_wr_fd) { r = write(timer_manager_control_wr_fd, &byte, 1); if (r == -1) { sysErrorBelch("ioManagerDie: write"); } timer_manager_control_wr_fd = -1; } for (i=0; i < n_capabilities; i++) { fd = capabilities[i]->io_manager_control_wr_fd; if (0 <= fd) { r = write(fd, &byte, 1); if (r == -1) { sysErrorBelch("ioManagerDie: write"); } capabilities[i]->io_manager_control_wr_fd = -1; } } } void ioManagerStartCap (Capability **cap) { rts_evalIO(cap,&base_GHCziConcziIO_ensureIOManagerIsRunning_closure,NULL); } void ioManagerStart (void) { // Make sure the IO manager thread is running Capability *cap; if (timer_manager_control_wr_fd < 0 || io_manager_wakeup_fd < 0) { cap = rts_lock(); ioManagerStartCap(&cap); rts_unlock(cap); } } #endif #if !defined(THREADED_RTS) #define N_PENDING_HANDLERS 16 siginfo_t pending_handler_buf[N_PENDING_HANDLERS]; siginfo_t *next_pending_handler = pending_handler_buf; #endif /* THREADED_RTS */ /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Low-level signal handler * * Places the requested handler on a stack of pending handlers to be * started up at the next context switch. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void generic_handler(int sig USED_IF_THREADS, siginfo_t *info, void *p STG_UNUSED) { #if defined(THREADED_RTS) StgWord8 buf[sizeof(siginfo_t) + 1]; int r; buf[0] = sig; if (info == NULL) { // info may be NULL on Solaris (see #3790) memset(buf+1, 0, sizeof(siginfo_t)); } else { memcpy(buf+1, info, sizeof(siginfo_t)); } if (0 <= timer_manager_control_wr_fd) { r = write(timer_manager_control_wr_fd, buf, sizeof(siginfo_t)+1); if (r == -1 && errno == EAGAIN) { errorBelch("lost signal due to full pipe: %d\n", sig); } } // If the IO manager hasn't told us what the FD of the write end // of its pipe is, there's not much we can do here, so just ignore // the signal.. #else /* not THREADED_RTS */ /* Can't call allocate from here. Probably can't call malloc either. However, we have to schedule a new thread somehow. It's probably ok to request a context switch and allow the scheduler to start the handler thread, but how do we communicate this to the scheduler? We need some kind of locking, but with low overhead (i.e. no blocking signals every time around the scheduler). Signal Handlers are atomic (i.e. they can't be interrupted), and we can make use of this. We just need to make sure the critical section of the scheduler can't be interrupted - the only way to do this is to block signals. However, we can lower the overhead by only blocking signals when there are any handlers to run, i.e. the set of pending handlers is non-empty. */ /* We use a stack to store the pending signals. We can't dynamically grow this since we can't allocate any memory from within a signal handler. Hence unfortunately we have to bomb out if the buffer overflows. It might be acceptable to carry on in certain circumstances, depending on the signal. */ memcpy(next_pending_handler, info, sizeof(siginfo_t)); next_pending_handler++; // stack full? if (next_pending_handler == &pending_handler_buf[N_PENDING_HANDLERS]) { errorBelch("too many pending signals"); stg_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } interruptCapability(&MainCapability); #endif /* THREADED_RTS */ } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Blocking/Unblocking of the user signals * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void blockUserSignals(void) { sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &userSignals, &savedSignals); } void unblockUserSignals(void) { sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &savedSignals, NULL); } bool anyUserHandlers(void) { return n_haskell_handlers != 0; } #if !defined(THREADED_RTS) void awaitUserSignals(void) { while (!signals_pending() && sched_state == SCHED_RUNNING) { pause(); } } #endif /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Install a Haskell signal handler. * * We should really do this in Haskell in GHC.Conc, and share the * signal_handlers array with the one there. * * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int stg_sig_install(int sig, int spi, void *mask) { sigset_t signals, osignals; struct sigaction action; StgInt previous_spi; ACQUIRE_LOCK(&sig_mutex); // Block the signal until we figure out what to do // Count on this to fail if the signal number is invalid if (sig < 0 || sigemptyset(&signals) || sigaddset(&signals, sig) || sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &signals, &osignals)) { RELEASE_LOCK(&sig_mutex); return STG_SIG_ERR; } more_handlers(sig); previous_spi = signal_handlers[sig]; action.sa_flags = 0; switch(spi) { case STG_SIG_IGN: action.sa_handler = SIG_IGN; break; case STG_SIG_DFL: action.sa_handler = SIG_DFL; break; case STG_SIG_RST: action.sa_flags |= SA_RESETHAND; /* fall through */ case STG_SIG_HAN: action.sa_sigaction = generic_handler; action.sa_flags |= SA_SIGINFO; break; default: barf("stg_sig_install: bad spi"); } if (mask != NULL) action.sa_mask = *(sigset_t *)mask; else sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags |= sig == SIGCHLD && nocldstop ? SA_NOCLDSTOP : 0; if (sigaction(sig, &action, NULL)) { errorBelch("sigaction"); RELEASE_LOCK(&sig_mutex); return STG_SIG_ERR; } signal_handlers[sig] = spi; switch(spi) { case STG_SIG_RST: case STG_SIG_HAN: sigaddset(&userSignals, sig); if (previous_spi != STG_SIG_HAN && previous_spi != STG_SIG_RST) { n_haskell_handlers++; } break; default: sigdelset(&userSignals, sig); if (previous_spi == STG_SIG_HAN || previous_spi == STG_SIG_RST) { n_haskell_handlers--; } break; } if (sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &osignals, NULL)) { errorBelch("sigprocmask"); RELEASE_LOCK(&sig_mutex); return STG_SIG_ERR; } RELEASE_LOCK(&sig_mutex); return previous_spi; } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Creating new threads for signal handlers. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #if !defined(THREADED_RTS) void startSignalHandlers(Capability *cap) { siginfo_t *info; int sig; blockUserSignals(); while (next_pending_handler != pending_handler_buf) { next_pending_handler--; sig = next_pending_handler->si_signo; if (signal_handlers[sig] == STG_SIG_DFL) { continue; // handler has been changed. } info = stgMallocBytes(sizeof(siginfo_t), "startSignalHandlers"); // freed by runHandler memcpy(info, next_pending_handler, sizeof(siginfo_t)); scheduleThread(cap, createIOThread(cap, RtsFlags.GcFlags.initialStkSize, rts_apply(cap, rts_apply(cap, &base_GHCziConcziSignal_runHandlersPtr_closure, rts_mkPtr(cap, info)), rts_mkInt(cap, info->si_signo)))); } unblockUserSignals(); } #endif /* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Mark signal handlers during GC. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void markSignalHandlers (evac_fn evac STG_UNUSED, void *user STG_UNUSED) { // nothing to do } #else /* !RTS_USER_SIGNALS */ StgInt stg_sig_install(StgInt sig STG_UNUSED, StgInt spi STG_UNUSED, void* mask STG_UNUSED) { //barf("User signals not supported"); return STG_SIG_DFL; } #endif #if defined(RTS_USER_SIGNALS) /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * SIGINT handler. * * We like to shutdown nicely after receiving a SIGINT, write out the * stats, write profiling info, close open files and flush buffers etc. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void shutdown_handler(int sig STG_UNUSED) { // If we're already trying to interrupt the RTS, terminate with // extreme prejudice. So the first ^C tries to exit the program // cleanly, and the second one just kills it. if (sched_state >= SCHED_INTERRUPTING) { stg_exit(EXIT_INTERRUPTED); } else { interruptStgRts(); } } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * SIGUSR2 handler. * * We try to give the user an indication of what we are currently doing * in response to SIGUSR2. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void backtrace_handler(int sig STG_UNUSED) { #if USE_LIBDW LibdwSession *session = libdwInit(); Backtrace *bt = libdwGetBacktrace(session); libdwPrintBacktrace(session, stderr, bt); backtraceFree(bt); libdwFree(session); #else fprintf(stderr, "This build does not support backtraces.\n"); #endif } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * An empty signal handler, currently used for SIGPIPE * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void empty_handler (int sig STG_UNUSED) { // nothing } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- SIGTSTP handling When a process is suspeended with ^Z and resumed again, the shell makes no attempt to save and restore the terminal settings. So on resume, any terminal setting modifications we made (e.g. turning off ICANON due to hSetBuffering NoBuffering) may well be lost. Hence, we arrange to save and restore the terminal settings ourselves. The trick we use is: - catch SIGTSTP - in the handler, kill(getpid(),SIGSTOP) - when this returns, restore the TTY settings This means we don't have to catch SIGCONT too. Note we don't re-throw SIGTSTP, we throw SIGSTOP instead. This is for a few reasons: - re-throwing SIGTSTP would require temporarily restoring the default sigaction. - it doesn't work on certain buggy pthread implementations (e.g. OpenBSD). - throwing SIGTSTP seems slightly dodgy anyway. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void sigtstp_handler(int sig); static void set_sigtstp_action (bool handle); static void sigtstp_handler (int sig STG_UNUSED) { int fd; struct termios ts[3]; // save the current TTY state for TTYs we modified for (fd = 0; fd <= 2; fd++) { if (__hscore_get_saved_termios(fd) != NULL) { tcgetattr(fd,&ts[fd]); } } // really stop the process now kill(getpid(), SIGSTOP); // on return, restore the TTY state for (fd = 0; fd <= 2; fd++) { if (__hscore_get_saved_termios(fd) != NULL) { tcsetattr(0,TCSANOW,&ts[fd]); } } } static void set_sigtstp_action (bool handle) { struct sigaction sa; if (handle) { sa.sa_handler = sigtstp_handler; } else { sa.sa_handler = SIG_DFL; } sa.sa_flags = 0; sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask); if (sigaction(SIGTSTP, &sa, NULL) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to install SIGTSTP handler"); } } /* Used by ItimerTimerCreate and ItimerSetitimer implementations */ void install_vtalrm_handler(int sig, TickProc handle_tick) { struct sigaction action; action.sa_handler = handle_tick; sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); #if defined(SA_RESTART) // specify SA_RESTART. One consequence if we don't do this is // that readline gets confused by the -threaded RTS. It seems // that if a SIGALRM handler is installed without SA_RESTART, // readline installs its own SIGALRM signal handler (see // readline's signals.c), and this somehow causes readline to go // wrong when the input exceeds a single line (try it). action.sa_flags = SA_RESTART; #else action.sa_flags = 0; #endif if (sigaction(sig, &action, NULL) == -1) { sysErrorBelch("sigaction"); stg_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } } /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Install default signal handlers. * * The RTS installs a default signal handler for catching * SIGINT, so that we can perform an orderly shutdown. * * Haskell code may install their own SIGINT handler, which is * fine, provided they're so kind as to put back the old one * when they de-install. * * In addition to handling SIGINT, the RTS also handles SIGFPE * by ignoring it. Apparently IEEE requires floating-point * exceptions to be ignored by default, but alpha-dec-osf3 * doesn't seem to do so. * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void initDefaultHandlers(void) { struct sigaction action,oact; // install the SIGINT handler action.sa_handler = shutdown_handler; sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags = 0; if (sigaction(SIGINT, &action, &oact) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to install SIGINT handler"); } #if defined(HAVE_SIGINTERRUPT) siginterrupt(SIGINT, 1); // isn't this the default? --SDM #endif // install the SIGFPE handler // In addition to handling SIGINT, also handle SIGFPE by ignoring it. // Apparently IEEE requires floating-point exceptions to be ignored by // default, but alpha-dec-osf3 doesn't seem to do so. // Commented out by SDM 2/7/2002: this causes an infinite loop on // some architectures when an integer division by zero occurs: we // don't recover from the floating point exception, and the // program just generates another one immediately. #if 0 action.sa_handler = SIG_IGN; sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags = 0; if (sigaction(SIGFPE, &action, &oact) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to install SIGFPE handler"); } #endif #if defined(alpha_HOST_ARCH) ieee_set_fp_control(0); #endif // ignore SIGPIPE; see #1619 // actually, we use an empty signal handler rather than SIG_IGN, // so that SIGPIPE gets reset to its default behaviour on exec. action.sa_handler = empty_handler; sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags = 0; if (sigaction(SIGPIPE, &action, &oact) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to install SIGPIPE handler"); } // Print a backtrace on SIGUSR2 action.sa_handler = backtrace_handler; sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags = 0; if (sigaction(SIGUSR2, &action, &oact) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to install SIGUSR2 handler"); } set_sigtstp_action(true); } void resetDefaultHandlers(void) { struct sigaction action; action.sa_handler = SIG_DFL; sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags = 0; // restore SIGINT if (sigaction(SIGINT, &action, NULL) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to uninstall SIGINT handler"); } // restore SIGPIPE if (sigaction(SIGPIPE, &action, NULL) != 0) { sysErrorBelch("warning: failed to uninstall SIGPIPE handler"); } set_sigtstp_action(false); } #endif /* RTS_USER_SIGNALS */