On Sat, Nov 18, 2006 at 08:30:02PM +0100, Jan Engelhardt wrote:
>
> On Nov 18 2006 02:38, Oleg Verych wrote:
> >On Sat, Nov 18, 2006 at 03:04:13AM +0100, Folkert van Heusden wrote:
> >> > > > I found that sometimes processes disappear on some heavily used system
> >> > > > of mine without any logging. So I've written a patch against 2.6.18.2
> >> > > > which emits logging when a process emits a fatal signal.
> >> > > Why not to patch default signal handlers in glibc, to have not only
> >> > > stderr, but syslog, or /dev/kmsg copy of fatal messages?
> >> > Afaik when a proces gets shot because of a segfault, also the libraries
> >> > it used are shot so to say. iirc some of the more fatal signals are
> >> > handled directly by the kernel.
> >
> >Kernel sends signals, no doubt.
> >
> >Then, who you think prints that "Killed" or "Segmentation fault"
> >messages in *stderr*?
> >[Hint: libc's default signal handler (man 2 signal).]
>
>
> Please enlighten us on how you plan to catch the uncatchable SIGKILL.
Here's question of getting information. Collecting information is
possible by `waitpid()' from parent process as Miquel noted.
That man above, gave me impression, that SIG_DFL can not be changed in
case of KILL and STOP signals, what yields to "The signals SIGKILL and
SIGSTOP cannot be caught or ignored." Implementation of such no-action
can be different. In case if kernel just stops processing of task with
STOP, breaks with KILL, without giving a chance to flush any pending data
OK, if this is an assembler prorgam with just data segment and no
infrastructure at all. But i think (didn't read anything), it is bad, if
there's libc with standard stream I/O buffers and no callback is possible.
>
> -`J'
> --
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