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I have a console-mode Windows application (ported from Unix) that was originally designed to do a clean exit when it received ^C (Unix SIGINT). A clean exit in this case involves waiting, potentially quite a long time, for remote network connections to close down. (I know this is not the normal behavior of ^C but I am not in a position to change it.) The program is single-threaded.

I can trap ^C with either signal(SIGINT) (as under Unix) or with SetConsoleCtrlHandler. Either works correctly when the program is run under CMD.EXE. However, if I use the "bash" shell that comes with MSYS (I am using the MinGW environment to build the program, as this allows me to reuse the Unix makefiles) then the program is forcibly terminated some random, short time (less than 100 milliseconds) after the ^C. This is unacceptable, since as I mentioned, the program needs to wait for remote network connections to close down.

It is very likely that people will want to run this program under MSYS bash. Also, this effect breaks the test suite. I have not been able to find any way to work around the problem either from within the program (ideal) or by settings on the shell (acceptable). Can anyone recommend anything?

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    You can use <signal.h> all you want on Windows, but the OS does not generate SIGINT when you type control-C at a console window, so it doesn't do you any good.
    – zwol
    Aug 16, 2011 at 21:55
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    Is there a way to make the network connection more robust? Even if you handle the program shutdown properly, what will happen when someone trips over the power cord? Aug 16, 2011 at 22:20
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    <signal.h> works for me with the Microsoft CRT on Windows. My handler registered with signal() gets called with SIGINT when I type Ctrl+C in the console window. Aug 16, 2011 at 23:03
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    @Brian: Actually, I think that was my mistake: see stackoverflow.com/questions/7085604/… -- generating CTRL_C_EVENT from another process doesn't seem to be supported at the kernel32 level, which made me think the signal handlers weren't doing anything constructive.
    – zwol
    Aug 16, 2011 at 23:50
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    @Zack Sounds like you've found the answer - perhaps it's time to close this question, so that people like me don't spend time trying to answer it? ;) Aug 17, 2011 at 22:17

6 Answers 6

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I had the exact same problem - I had written a program with a SIGINT/SIGTERM handler. That handler did clean-up work which sometimes took awhile. When I ran the program from within msys bash, ctrl-c would cause my SIGINT handler to fire, but it would not finish - the program was terminated ("from the outside", as it were) before it could complete its clean-up work.

Building on phs's answer, and this answer to a similar question: https://stackoverflow.com/a/23678996/2494650, I came up with the following solution. It's insanely simple, and it might have some side-effects that I've yet to discover, but it fixed the problem for me.

Create a ~/.bashrc file with the following line:

trap '' SIGINT

That's it. This traps the sigint signal and prevents msys bash from terminating your program "from the outside". However, it somehow still lets the SIGINT signal through to your program, allowing it to do its graceful cleanup/shutdown. I can't tell you exactly why it works this way, but it does - at least for me.

Good luck!

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  • I guess this could be related to the Cygwin Bash's signal handler intefering with interrupted system calls. I remember that POSIX signal handlers are not expected to perform any system calls to avoid interference. I do not know how Bash implements trap in Linux but it appears to always complete the trap with both resetting the trap and setting it to an empty handler. A sample script shows unstable behaviour of trap - in Cygwin when invoked with timeout 2s (which sends SIGTERM), gist.github.com/ilatypov/2d8d8043ef6592ebd6064906b773c6c7
    – eel ghEEz
    Nov 4, 2016 at 15:56
  • Spotted a side effect - ^c to empty the current typed command no longer works. (eg type asdf and then ^c)
    – Lexi
    Mar 12, 2017 at 11:59
  • FYI -- this trick apparently works for 32-bit but not for 64-bit ... not sure why. Oct 12, 2018 at 13:15
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This could be due to the infamous mintty "Input/Output interaction with alien programs" problem (aka mintty issue #56). In this case it is manifesting as Ctrl-C abruptly killing the program rather than being passed down to the program as a signal to be caught and handled. Evidence for this theory is based on zwol's extensive explanation: "console-mode Windows application", "[application is] designed to do a clean exit when it received ^C", "[application] works correctly when the program is run under CMD.EXE" but "[when using the terminal] that comes with MSYS [...] program is forcibly terminated" (at the time of writing (2018) MSYS defaults to using mintty as its terminal).

Unfortunately mintty isn't a full Windows console replacement and various behaviours expected by "native" Windows programs are not implemented. However, you might have some joy wrapping such native programs in winpty when running them within mintty...

Other questions also describe this behaviour: see https://superuser.com/questions/606201/how-to-politely-kill-windows-process-from-cygwin and https://superuser.com/questions/1039098/how-to-make-mintty-close-gracefully-on-ctrl-c .

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Arg - 5 minute edit on comment. Here's what I wanted to write:

As a workaround, instead of trying to trap the CTRL-C event which is also being propagated to the shell I'd propose turning off the ENABLED_PROCESSED_INPUT on stdin so that CTRL-C is reported as a keyboard input instead of as a signal:

DWORD mode;
HANDLE hstdin = GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE);
GetConsoleMode(hstdin, &mode);
SetConsoleMode(hstdin, mode & ~ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT); /* disable CTRL-C processing as a signal */

You could then process keyboard input in your main thread while the rest of the program does its thing in a separate thread and set an event to cleanup when CTRL-C is received.

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  • I like this idea. I'll try it next time I cycle back to Windows issues and let you know how it goes.
    – zwol
    Sep 7, 2011 at 21:07
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When you run your program with MSYS bash, do you run the executable directly, or is there a wrapping (bash) shell script?

If so, it may be registering a custom Ctrl-C handler with the trap command (that does a sleep followed by a kill.) If such a thing exists, alter or remove it.

If there is no trap registered, or there is no wrapping script, consider making such a script and adding your own trap to override the default behavior. You can see an example of how to use it here or on bash's man page (in the SHELL BUILTINS section).

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  • I run the executable directly. I would like to think that there is a better solution than creating a wrapper script just to deal with this MSYS bug (and I suspect it wouldn't work -- see the bug report linked from the comments on the question; this is a problem deep in the guts of MSYS).
    – zwol
    Sep 4, 2011 at 22:33
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Ctrl-C is SIGINT? I thought Ctrl-Z was SIGINT, but Ctrl-C is SIGTERM. Check that.

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    Well, technically speaking, Windows doesn't have SIGINT or SIGTERM. Ctrl-Z generates EOF on standard input, and Ctrl-C causes a "console control event" to be generated. There are two documented console control events: Ctrl-C and Ctrl-BREAK. MSVCRT appears to map both of those to SIGINT internally. See msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms683155%28v=VS.85%29.aspx
    – zwol
    Sep 6, 2011 at 16:41
  • Even on UNIX, Ctrl-C usually sends SIGINT and Ctrl-Z usually sends SIGTSTP (terminal stop).
    – CB Bailey
    Sep 6, 2011 at 19:34
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Do you have a CYGWIN environment setting (in control panel/environment variables)? Try setting CYGWIN=notty and restart open a new MSYS bash shell - does the problem persist?

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  • My bad - in that case why not use your own custom keyboard handler? Instead of trying to trap the CTRL-C event which is also being propagated to the shell I'd propose:
    – Anthill
    Sep 7, 2011 at 8:49
  • Could you elaborate on that? I haven't the least idea how to do such a thing.
    – zwol
    Sep 7, 2011 at 14:53
  • Hi Zack - not enough place in the comments - see my answer about disabling CTRL-C signal processing on stdin. If you need an example of a simple keyboard handler which traps CTRL-C as an input instead of a signal let me know and I'll post an example.
    – Anthill
    Sep 7, 2011 at 16:18

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