Is there any way to create a user defined signal in Linux?
Is the开发者_运维问答re any way to create a user defined signals in Linux? My signal (signal number) should not match any of the existing signal numbers.
In other words, i want to create my own unique signal, which will be registered and caught by my handler.
Is it possible? If yes, how?
Thanks in advance.
SIGRTMIN
through SIGRTMAX
(these are not normally constants but macros which expand to functions evaluated at runtime) are available for whatever use you like, as are SIGUSR1
and SIGUSR2
. The former have additional realtime queueing support; the latter don't. Simply choose one to use.
You can compile your own kernel with special signals :)
You can't add or register your own SIGWHATEVER.
See sigset_t
, it is fixed size. See valid_signal()
beartraps.
There are the USR1
and USR2
signals designed for user defined purposes.
You can use USR1 and USR2 for this kind of thing.
If that's not enough, you can emulate signal like behaviour by having your application listen on a socket which external apps can send messages to.
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