Mercurial > emacs
view src/syssignal.h @ 104857:ea5c49fab49a
* lisp/files.el (find-alternate-file): If the old buffer is modified
and visiting a file, behave similarly to `kill-buffer' when killing
it, thus reverting to the pre-1.878 behavior; see
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2009-09/msg00101.html
for discussion. Also, consult `buffer-file-name' as a variable not
as a function, for consistency with the rest of the code.
author | Karl Fogel <kfogel@red-bean.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 05 Sep 2009 15:16:49 +0000 |
parents | e038c1a8307c |
children | 1d1d5d9bd884 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* syssignal.h - System-dependent definitions for signals. Copyright (C) 1993, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ extern void init_signals P_ ((void)); #if defined (HAVE_GTK_AND_PTHREAD) || defined (HAVE_NS) #include <pthread.h> /* If defined, asynchronous signals delivered to a non-main thread are forwarded to the main thread. */ #define FORWARD_SIGNAL_TO_MAIN_THREAD #endif #ifdef FORWARD_SIGNAL_TO_MAIN_THREAD extern pthread_t main_thread; #endif #ifdef POSIX_SIGNALS /* Don't #include <signal.h>. That header should always be #included before "config.h", because some configuration files (like s/hpux.h) indicate that SIGIO doesn't work by #undef-ing SIGIO. If this file #includes <signal.h>, then that will re-#define SIGIO and confuse things. */ /* XXX This is not correct anymore, there is a BROKEN_SIGIO macro. */ #define SIGMASKTYPE sigset_t #define SIGEMPTYMASK (empty_mask) #define SIGFULLMASK (full_mask) extern sigset_t empty_mask, full_mask; /* POSIX pretty much destroys any possibility of writing sigmask as a macro in standard C. We always define our own version because the predefined macro in Glibc 2.1 is only provided for compatility for old programs that use int as signal mask type. */ #undef sigmask #ifdef __GNUC__ #define sigmask(SIG) \ ({ \ sigset_t _mask; \ sigemptyset (&_mask); \ sigaddset (&_mask, SIG); \ _mask; \ }) #else /* ! defined (__GNUC__) */ extern sigset_t sys_sigmask (); #define sigmask(SIG) (sys_sigmask (SIG)) #endif /* ! defined (__GNUC__) */ #undef sigpause #define sigpause(MASK) sigsuspend (&(MASK)) #define sigblock(SIG) sys_sigblock (SIG) #define sigunblock(SIG) sys_sigunblock (SIG) #ifndef sigsetmask #define sigsetmask(SIG) sys_sigsetmask (SIG) #endif #define sighold(SIG) ONLY_USED_IN_BSD_4_1 #define sigrelse(SIG) ONLY_USED_IN_BSD_4_1 #undef signal #define signal(SIG,ACT) sys_signal(SIG,ACT) /* Whether this is what all systems want or not, this is what appears to be assumed in the source, for example data.c:arith_error. */ typedef RETSIGTYPE (*signal_handler_t) (/*int*/); signal_handler_t sys_signal P_ ((int signal_number, signal_handler_t action)); sigset_t sys_sigblock P_ ((sigset_t new_mask)); sigset_t sys_sigunblock P_ ((sigset_t new_mask)); sigset_t sys_sigsetmask P_ ((sigset_t new_mask)); #define sys_sigdel(MASK,SIG) sigdelset (&MASK,SIG) #else /* ! defined (POSIX_SIGNALS) */ #ifdef USG5_4 extern SIGMASKTYPE sigprocmask_set; #ifndef sigblock #define sigblock(sig) \ (sigprocmask_set = SIGEMPTYMASK | (sig), \ sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &sigprocmask_set, NULL)) #endif #ifndef sigunblock #define sigunblock(sig) \ (sigprocmask_set = SIGFULLMASK & ~(sig), \ sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, &sigprocmask_set, NULL)) #endif #else #ifdef USG #ifndef sigunblock #define sigunblock(sig) #endif #else #ifndef sigunblock #define sigunblock(SIG) \ { SIGMASKTYPE omask = sigblock (SIGEMPTYMASK); sigsetmask (omask & ~SIG); } #endif #endif /* ! defined (USG) */ #endif /* ! defined (USG5_4) */ #endif /* ! defined (POSIX_SIGNALS) */ #ifndef SIGMASKTYPE #define SIGMASKTYPE int #endif #ifndef SIGEMPTYMASK #define SIGEMPTYMASK (0) #endif #ifndef SIGFULLMASK #define SIGFULLMASK (0xffffffff) #endif #ifndef sigmask #define sigmask(no) (1L << ((no) - 1)) #endif #ifndef sigunblock #define sigunblock(SIG) \ { SIGMASKTYPE omask = sigblock (SIGFULLMASK); sigsetmask (omask & ~SIG); } #endif #define sigfree() sigsetmask (SIGEMPTYMASK) #if defined (SIGINFO) && defined (BROKEN_SIGINFO) #undef SIGINFO #endif #if defined (SIGIO) && defined (BROKEN_SIGIO) # undef SIGIO # if defined (__Lynx__) # undef SIGPOLL /* Defined as SIGIO on LynxOS */ # endif #endif #if defined (SIGPOLL) && defined (BROKEN_SIGPOLL) #undef SIGPOLL #endif #if defined (SIGTSTP) && defined (BROKEN_SIGTSTP) #undef SIGTSTP #endif #if defined (SIGURG) && defined (BROKEN_SIGURG) #undef SIGURG #endif #if defined (SIGAIO) && defined (BROKEN_SIGAIO) #undef SIGAIO #endif #if defined (SIGPTY) && defined (BROKEN_SIGPTY) #undef SIGPTY #endif #if NSIG < NSIG_MINIMUM # ifdef NSIG # undef NSIG # endif # define NSIG NSIG_MINIMUM #endif /* On bsd, [man says] kill does not accept a negative number to kill a pgrp. Must do that using the killpg call. */ #ifdef BSD_SYSTEM #define EMACS_KILLPG(gid, signo) (killpg ( (gid), (signo))) #else #ifdef WINDOWSNT #define EMACS_KILLPG(gid, signo) (kill (gid, signo)) #else #define EMACS_KILLPG(gid, signo) (kill (-(gid), (signo))) #endif #endif /* Define SIGCHLD as an alias for SIGCLD. There are many conditionals testing SIGCHLD. */ #ifdef SIGCLD #ifndef SIGCHLD #define SIGCHLD SIGCLD #endif /* SIGCHLD */ #endif /* ! defined (SIGCLD) */ #ifndef HAVE_STRSIGNAL /* strsignal is in sysdep.c */ char *strsignal (); #endif #ifdef FORWARD_SIGNAL_TO_MAIN_THREAD #define SIGNAL_THREAD_CHECK(signo) \ do { \ if (!pthread_equal (pthread_self (), main_thread)) \ { \ /* POSIX says any thread can receive the signal. On GNU/Linux \ that is not true, but for other systems (FreeBSD at least) \ it is. So direct the signal to the correct thread and block \ it from this thread. */ \ sigset_t new_mask; \ \ sigemptyset (&new_mask); \ sigaddset (&new_mask, signo); \ pthread_sigmask (SIG_BLOCK, &new_mask, 0); \ pthread_kill (main_thread, signo); \ return; \ } \ } while (0) #else /* not FORWARD_SIGNAL_TO_MAIN_THREAD */ #define SIGNAL_THREAD_CHECK(signo) #endif /* not FORWARD_SIGNAL_TO_MAIN_THREAD */ /* arch-tag: 4580e86a-340d-4574-9e11-a742b6e1a152 (do not change this comment) */