SIGQUEUE(3) manual page
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sigqueue - queue a signal and data to a process
#include <signal.h>
int sigqueue(pid_t pid, int sig, const union sigval
value);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)
):
sigqueue(): _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 199309L
sigqueue() sends the signal
specified in sig to the process whose PID is given in pid. The permissions
required to send a signal are the same as for kill(2)
. As with kill(2)
,
the null signal (0) can be used to check if a process with a given PID
exists.
The value argument is used to specify an accompanying item of data
(either an integer or a pointer value) to be sent with the signal, and
has the following type:
union sigval {
int sival_int;
void *sival_ptr;
};
If the receiving process has installed a handler for this signal using
the SA_SIGINFO flag to sigaction(2)
, then it can obtain this data via the
si_value field of the siginfo_t structure passed as the second argument
to the handler. Furthermore, the si_code field of that structure will be
set to SI_QUEUE.
On success, sigqueue() returns 0, indicating
that the signal was successfully queued to the receiving process. Otherwise,
-1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
- EAGAIN
- The limit
of signals which may be queued has been reached. (See signal(7)
for further
information.)
- EINVAL
- sig was invalid.
- EPERM
- The process does not have permission
to send the signal to the receiving process. For the required permissions,
see kill(2)
.
- ESRCH
- No process has a PID matching pid.
This system
call first appeared in Linux 2.2.
The
sigqueue() function is thread-safe.
POSIX.1-2001.
If this
function results in the sending of a signal to the process that invoked
it, and that signal was not blocked by the calling thread, and no other
threads were willing to handle this signal (either by having it unblocked,
or by waiting for it using sigwait(3)
), then at least some signal must
be delivered to this thread before this function returns.
On Linux, this
function is implemented using the rt_sigqueueinfo(2)
system call. The system
call differs in its third argument, which is the siginfo_t structure that
will be supplied to the receiving process’s signal handler or returned by
the receiving process’s sigtimedwait(2)
call. Inside the glibc sigqueue()
wrapper, this argument, uinfo, is initialized as follows:
uinfo.si_signo = sig; /* Argument supplied to sigqueue() */
uinfo.si_code = SI_QUEUE;
uinfo.si_pid = getpid(); /* Process ID of sender */
uinfo.si_uid = getuid(); /* Real UID of sender */
uinfo.si_value = val; /* Argument supplied to sigqueue() */
kill(2)
, rt_sigqueueinfo(2)
, sigaction(2)
, signal(2)
, pthread_sigqueue(3)
,
sigwait(3)
, signal(7)
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