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In a system running Linux 2.6.35+ my program creates many child processes and monitors them. If a child process dies I do some clean-up and spawn the process again. I use signalfd() to get the SIGCHLD signal in my process. signalfd is used asynchronously using libevent.

When using signal handlers for non-real time signals, while the signal handler is running for a particular signal further occurrence of the same signal has to be blocked to avoid getting into recursive handlers. If multiple signals arrive at that time then kernel invokes the handler only once (when the signal is unblocked).

Is it the same behavior when using signalfd() as well? Since signalfd based handling doesn't have the typical problems associated with the asynchronous execution of the normal signal handlers I was thinking kernel can queue all the further occurrences of SIGCHLD?

Can anyone clarify the Linux behavior in this case ...

2 Answers 2

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On Linux, multiple children terminating before you read a SIGCHLD with signalfd() will be compressed into a single SIGCHLD. This means that when you read the SIGCHLD signal, you have to clean up after all children that have terminated:

// Do this after you've read() a SIGCHLD from the signalfd file descriptor:
while (1) {
    int status;
    pid_t pid = waitpid(-1, &status, WNOHANG);
    if (pid <= 0) {
        break;
    }
    // something happened with child 'pid', do something about it...
    // Details are in 'status', see waitpid() manpage
}

I should note that I have in fact seen this signal compression when two child processed terminated at the same time. If I did only a single waitpid(), one of the children that terminated was not handled; and the above loop fixed it.

Corresponding documentation:

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    @Santhosh: also note that signalfd() itself compresses the SIGCHLD signals, not epoll. This means not only will you not get multiple events from epoll, but you will only get a single SIGCHLD signal from the read(); the struct signalfd_siginfo of the others will be lost forever. Dec 6, 2011 at 11:27
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    Thanks. I will do waitpid() in a loop as you suggested.. From signalfd_siginfo I was accessing fields ssi_code, ssi_status to get the signal # that was sent to the child process or flags like CLD_STOPPED or CLI_CONTINUED. But looks like I should rather use macros like WIFEXITED, WIFSIGNALED which needs only the status value returned by waitpid.
    – Manohar
    Dec 6, 2011 at 11:42
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    @Ambroz, but you will only get a single SIGCHLD signal from the read(); the struct signalfd_siginfo of the others will be lost forever -> Is it a bug or by design? Can you point to some document which describes it? I thought signalfd were a hassle-free convenient way of handling child processes...
    – Vi.
    Jul 13, 2013 at 8:55
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    Thanks. Maybe it should be documented everywhere (signalfd, kill, sigwaitinfo, signal(7))?
    – Vi.
    Jul 14, 2013 at 20:03
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    @Vi.: Please see man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal.7.html: "By contrast, if multiple instances of a standard signal are delivered while that signal is currently blocked, then only one instance is queued"
    – alk
    Jun 26, 2016 at 12:05
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Actually the hassle-free way would be the waitfd functionally that would allow you to add a specific pid to poll()/epoll(). Unfortunately, it wasn't accepted to Linux years ago when it was proposed.

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    I really meant to add it as a comment not an answer, sorry. Oct 23, 2013 at 14:46
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    That functionality was implemented in Linux 5.2 with the CLONE_PIDFD flag to clone and was extended in Linux 5.3 with the pidfd_open syscall. Both return a new file descriptor that can be selected for readability with select, poll, or epoll_wait and waited upon with waitid with P_PIDFD to retrieve the exit status. This has the advantage that you can safely reap all children without using signals at all. Jun 16, 2020 at 21:26

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