4

I've got a small program that opens a file and does some operation on it. I subscribed the file closure to the program termination as follows:

static
void exit_handler (int ev, void *arg)
{
    fprintf(stderr, "bye %d\n", WEXITSTATUS(ev));
    fclose((FILE *)arg);
}

int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
    FILE *out;

    ...

    out = fopen(argv[1], "wt");
    if (out == NULL) {
        perror("Opening output file");
        exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
    }
    on_exit(exit_handler, out);

    ...
}

Trying to execute this I notice that it works properly only if the program terminates normally. In case of CTRL+C (SIGINT) the exit_handler callback is not executed.

Isn't that weird? Should I associate a exit(EXIT_FAILURE) call to the signal handler for SIGTERM? What is the best practice in this case?

2
  • 1
    Note that by default on most TTYs, CTRL+C will send SIGINT to the foreground process, not SIGTERM. Mar 22, 2016 at 18:30
  • @JonathonReinhart correct. I fixed it, thanks.
    – Dacav
    Mar 26, 2016 at 6:33

4 Answers 4

6

on_exit will not be invoked for SIGTERM signals. You need to add a handler for it with signal. For example:

void signalHandler(void)
{
  ...
}

int main(void)
{
  signal(SIGTERM, signalHandler);
}

Also note that SIGKILL can not be caught by design.

1
  • 4
    The signalHandler here can simply exit(0), which will call the atexit handlers. Mar 22, 2016 at 18:28
4

First of all, on_exit isn't specified by POSIX (atexit with the same semantics is). Second , the linux manual says:

The on_exit() function registers the given function to be called at normal process termination, whether via exit(3) or via return from the program's main().

Getting killed by a signal is not a normal exit for a process so callbacks installed with on_exit and atexit aren't implicitly called.

3
  • In fact atexit is defined by the ISO C standard, so it exists even on non-POSIX implementations. Sep 16, 2015 at 1:50
  • "Getting killed" is poor terminology. In fact, the process receives a signal and the default signal handler that the C library links into your executable is what terminates the program, thereby, the program is not "killed" and the signal could be ignored. Apr 6, 2020 at 17:10
  • I should mention that there are signals that cannot be caught or ignored, ike SIGKILL, that will cause your program to be killed by the kernel without any notification or ability to call atexit handlers. Apr 24, 2020 at 3:50
4

No, and in fact what you want is impossible. The signal generated by Ctrl+C is asynchronous, meaning it could occur between any two machine instructions in your program depending on when Ctrl+C is hit. As such, unless your program is thoroughly avoiding calling async-signal-unsafe functions anywhere in the main program flow, it's illegal to call async-signal-unsafe functions from the signal handler. exit is async-signal-unsafe, as is most of the default cleanup activity it does (like flushing/closing open files). I would expect the atexit function you want to register (atexit, not on_exit, is the correct name for this function) is also going to want to do async-signal-unsafe things.

If you need to perform cleanup when exiting based on a signal, you need to install a signal handler that does not exit itself, but instead sets a global volatile flag that your main program flow will later inspect (and exit if it's true).

2

From man page of on_exit,

The on_exit() function registers the given function to be called at normal process termination, whether via exit(3) or via return from the program's main().

So you need to explicity hook up a handler for SIGTERM using specific functions from signal.h

Something on the lines of

struct sigaction action;

memset (&action, 0, sizeof(action));
action.sa_handler = sigterm_handler;

if (sigaction(SIGTERM, &action, 0)) 
{
    perror ("sigaction");
    return 1;
}

/* SIGTERM handler. */
static void sigterm_handler (int sig)
{
...
}

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