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Why interrupting ruby process with child created using call to system does not interrupt ruby process itself? They should belong to the same group, so should be both interrupted. Also this is not valid for ruby2.0.

Given ruby 1.8.7 patch 371, ruby 1.9.3 patch 392 and ruby2.0 patch 0:

Running ruby1.8 -e 'system "sleep 100"; p $?; sleep' in bash and pressing ⌃C kills only inner call to sleep 100.

Ruby 1.9 behaves identically.

Though running ruby2.0 -e 'system "sleep 100"; p $?; sleep' interrupts both inner command and ruby process itself.2.0.0-p0

--EDIT--

Reading sources I've found that handling SIGINT, SIGQUIT and SIGHUP is switched to ignored in rb_syswait method which than waits for created sub process to finish and then restores handlers (rb_syswait in ruby v1.8.7-p370, ruby v1.9.3-p362 and without blocking handlers in ruby v2.0.0-p0).

Why is it done and why only for system and IO.popen, not %x{} or fork{}?

3
  • Do you want to know implementation details or how to work-around this? Apr 2, 2013 at 1:03
  • @SemyonPerepelitsa: both + what should be considered normal behaviour
    – tig
    Apr 2, 2013 at 1:10
  • @SemyonPerepelitsa now only why is it done and best workarounds
    – tig
    Apr 2, 2013 at 23:08

2 Answers 2

1

For a workaround, you can propagate SIGINT yourself. You can examine whether the system command exited due to a signal, and if so raise SIGINT:

ruby1.8 -e 'system "sleep 100"; p $?; Process.kill("INT",0) if $?.signaled?; sleep'
3
  • Does not help if process is handling interrupts: ruby1.8 -e 'system %q{ruby1.8 -e "Signal.trap(%q{INT}){exit}; sleep 10"}; p $?; Process.kill("INT",0) if $?.signaled?; sleep'
    – tig
    Nov 15, 2013 at 0:12
  • @tig That is true. In that case, you would need some other way (perhaps a special exit code in the child) to indicate that a signal was received by the child process.
    – Markku K.
    Nov 15, 2013 at 20:09
  • @tig, right, that was just an example. This was just a workaround, after all ... I don't think there is a workaround that is going to be usable in all cases.
    – Markku K.
    Nov 19, 2013 at 20:10
-1

This does not seem to be an question of Ruby but your operating system, which you did not specify. Process grouping and low-level system routing is done by the OS kernel.

2
  • Difference is in ruby, please compare source code at provided links
    – tig
    Nov 15, 2013 at 0:14
  • Run both commands under strace and compare the outputs. Perhaps, setpgid is called in one case and not the other?
    – dig
    Nov 15, 2013 at 0:38

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