Net::Server::SIG - adpf - Safer signal handling
use Net::Server::SIG qw(register_sig check_sigs); use IO::Select (); use POSIX qw(WNOHANG); my $select = IO::Select->new(); register_sig(PIPE => 'IGNORE', HUP => 'DEFAULT', USR1 => sub { print "I got a SIG $_[0]\n"; }, USR2 => sub { print "I got a SIG $_[0]\n"; }, CHLD => sub { 1 while (waitpid(-1, WNOHANG) > 0); }, ); ### add some handles to the select $select->add(\*STDIN); ### loop forever trying to stay alive while ( 1 ){ ### do a timeout to see if any signals got passed us ### while we were processing another signal my @fh = $select->can_read(10); my $key; my $val; ### this is the handler for safe (fine under unsafe also) if( &check_sigs() ){ # or my @sigs = &check_sigs(); next unless @fh; } my $handle = $fh[@fh]; ### do something with the handle }
Signals in Perl 5 are unsafe. Some future releases may be able to fix some of this (ie Perl 5.8 or 6.0), but it would be nice to have some safe, portable signal handling now. Clarification - much of the time, signals are safe enough. However, if the program employs forking or becomes a daemon which can receive many simultaneous signals, then the signal handling of Perl is normally not sufficient for the task.
Using a property of the select() function, Net::Server::SIG attempts to fix the unsafe problem. If a process is blocking on select() any signal will short circuit the select. Using this concept, Net::Server::SIG does the least work possible (changing one bit from 0 to 1). And depends upon the actual processing of the signals to take place immediately after the the select call via the "check_sigs" function. See the example shown above and also see the sigtest.pl script located in the examples directory of this distribution.
register_sig($SIG => \&code_ref)
unregister_sig($SIG)
check_sigs()
Paul Seamons (paul@seamons.com)
Rob B Brown (rob@roobik.com) - Provided a sounding board and feedback in creating Net::Server::SIG and sigtest.pl.
This package may be distributed under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Perl Artistic License All rights reserved.