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Explore multi-tasking, task control, and signal handling in Linux systems. Learn how to create, control, synchronize tasks, and communicate among them using signals. Understand process termination conditions and signal types.
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Task Control:Signals and AlarmsChapter 7 and 8 B. Ramamurthy
Multi-tasking • How to create multiple tasks? Ex: Xinu create() • How to control them? • ready() • resched() • How to synchronize them? How to communicate among them? • XINU: semaphores, send and receive messages • How to (software) interrupt a process? signals
Examples • Consider g++ myProg.c • You want to kill this process after you started the compilation..hit cntrl-C • Consider execution of a program called “badprog” >badprog It core dumps .. What happened? The error in the program results in a signal to kernel to stop and dump the offending code • Consider “kill –p <pid>” • Kill issues a termination signal to the process identified by the pid
Linux Processes • Similar to XINU Procs. • Lets understand how to create a linux process and control it. • Chapter 7 and 8 of text book. • Chapter 7 : multi-tasking • Chapter 8: Task communication and synchronization
Termination of a process • Normal completion, time limit exceeded, memory unavailable • Bounds violation, protection error, arithmetic error, invalid instruction • IO failure, Operator intervention, parent termination, parent request, killed by another process • A number of other conditions are possible. • Segmentation fault : usually happens when you try write/read into/from a non-existent array/structure/object component. Or access a pointer to a dynamic data before creating it. (new etc.) • Bus error: Related to function call and return. You have messed up the stack where the return address or parameters are stored.
Process Termination Process executes last statement and asks the operating system to delete it (exit) Output data from child to parent (via wait) Process’ resources are deallocated by operating system Parent may terminate execution of children processes (abort) Child has exceeded allocated resources Task assigned to child is no longer required If parent is exiting Some operating system do not allow child to continue if its parent terminates All children terminated - cascading termination
Signals • Signals provide a simple method for transmitting software interrupts to UNIX process • Signals cannot carry information directly, which limits their usefulness as an general inter-process communication mechanism • However each type of signal is given a mnemonic name; Ex: SIGINT • See signal.h for others • SIGHUP, SIGINT, SIGILL, SIGTRAP, SIGFPE, SIGKILL • SIGALRM (sent by kernel to a process after an alarm timer has expired) • SIGTERM • signal (signal id, function) simply arms the signal
Signal Value Action Comment ------------------------------------------------------------------------- SIGHUP 1 Term Hangup detected on controlling terminal or death of controlling process SIGINT 2 Term Interrupt from keyboard SIGQUI 3 Core Quit from keyboard SIGILL 4 Core Illegal Instruction SIGABR 6 Core Abort signal from abort(3) SIGFP 8 Core Floating point exception SIGKILL 9 Term Kill signal SIGSEG 11 Core Invalid memory reference SIGPIPE 13 Term Broken pipe: write to pipe with no readers SIGALRM 14 Term Timer signal from alarm(2) SIGTERM 15 Term Termination signal SIGUSR1 30,10,16 Term User-defined signal 1 SIGUSR2 31,12,17 Term User-defined signal 2 SIGCHLD 20,17,18 Ign Child stopped or terminated SIGCONT 19,18,25 Cont Continue if stopped SIGSTOP 17,19,23 Stop Stop process SIGTSTP 18,20,24 Stop Stop typed at tty SIGTTIN 21,21,26 Stop tty input for background process SIGTTOU 22,22,27 Stop tty output for background process The signals SIGKILL and SIGSTOP cannot be caught, blocked, or ignored.
Realtime signals • Linux supports real-time signals as originally defined in the POSIX.1b real-time extensions (and now included in POSIX.1-2001). Linux supports 32 real-time signals, numbered from 32 (SIGRTMIN) to 63 (SIGRT- MAX) • Main difference is that these are queued and not lost. • Realtime signals are delivered in guaranteed order.
Intercept Signals Task1 Task2 Two essential parameters are destination process identifier and the signal code number: kill (pid, signal) Signals are a useful way of handling intermittent data arrivals or rare error conditions.
Handling Signals • Look at the examples: • Catching SIGALRM • Ignoring SIGALRM • sigtest.c • sigHandler.c • pingpong.c • See /usr/include/sys/iso/signal_iso.h for signal numbers
Signals and Alarms #include <signal.h> unsigned int alarm( unsigned int seconds ); alarm(a); will start a timer for a secsonds and will interrupt the calling process after a secs. time(&t); will get you current time in the variable t declared as time_t t ctime(&t); will convert time to ascii format Alarm has a sigaction function that is set for configuring the alarm handler etc. sigaction(SIGALRM, &act, &oldact) ; the third paramter is for old action configuration
Sample programs • Starting new tasks in linux: page 165 • Programs in pages: 174-180 on signals and alarms • See demos directory for the code • See page 175 for the second program • See page 178 … for the third program
Pingpong Parent PSIG 43 Child CSIG 42
Observe in pingpong.c • pause(): indefinite • sleep(): sleep is random/finite time • While loop • Signal handlers • Re-arming of the signals
Input/output Resources • What is standard IO? • These are resources allocated to the process at the time of creation: • From Wikipedia/Standard_streams
Volatile • A variable should be declared volatile whenever its value could change unexpectedly. In practice, only three types of variables could change: • Memory-mapped peripheral registers • Global variables modified by an interrupt service routine • Global variables within a multi-threaded application • Registers in devices are abstracted for programmatic access as “volatile” type
Summary • We studied signals and alarms and their specification and example programs