These functions allow the manipulation of POSIX signal sets.
sigemptyset () initializes the signal set given by
set to empty, with all signals excluded from the set.
sigfillset () initializes
set to full, including all signals.
sigaddset () and
sigdelset () add and delete respectively signal
signum from
set .
sigismember () tests whether
signum is a member of
set .
Objects of type
sigset_t must be initialized by a call to either
sigemptyset () or
sigfillset () before being passed to the functions
sigaddset (), sigdelset () and
sigismember () or the additional glibc functions described below
sigandset (), and
sigorset ()). The results are undefined if this is not done.
RETURN VALUE
sigemptyset (), sigfillset (), sigaddset (), and
sigdelset () return 0 on success and -1 on error.
sigismember () returns 1 if
signum is a member of
set , 0 if
signum is not a member, and -1 on error.
ERRORS
EINVAL
sig is not a valid signal.
CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1-2001.
NOTES
Glibc Notes If the
_GNU_SOURCE feature test macro is defined, then <signal.h>
exposes three other functions for manipulating signal
sets.
int sigisemptyset(sigset_t * set );
returns 1 if
set contains no signals, and 0 otherwise.
int sigorset(sigset_t * dest , sigset_t * left , sigset_t * right );
places the union of the sets
left and
right in
dest .
int sigandset(sigset_t * dest , sigset_t * left , sigset_t * right );
places the intersection of the sets
left and
right in
dest .
sigorset () and
sigandset () return 0 on success, and -1 on failure.
These functions are non-standard (a few other systems provide similar
functions) and their use should be avoided in portable applications.
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